Gleaner_19440330

VOL. XIX NAZARETH COLLEGE, ROCHESTER, N.Y., MARCH 30, 1944 No. 5
May Day Plans Electronics Promise ISRO SCHEDULED FORMA Y 5th AND 6th
Get Under Way Post-War Advantage JEAN SCHANTZ, JOAN DUGAN DIRECTING
Nu•nreth College'• 1944 May
Ouy is seheduled for the 8th day
or May. Plan~ are under wa~· to
mnke t hig the b(!st May Doy in
history. The honora r)' ehairman i&
~lliss Ruth Lorenz., Miss Jean
Foley, general chairman. The Spir­iLual
Chairman, Miss M1u·y J ane
Sehwarh, promises that His Ex·
cellency, Bishop Kearney, will be
11re&ent to begin the Day with the
Holy Sacrifice o{ the.. Mass. A !ter
b•· .. kfast, the Student Body will
mnreh in procession to the \'Drious
shrines of the four classes. Bene·
diction will follow the visitations
and wHI close the morning'~ activ.
ities.
The n rternoon'& progt•am in·
e1udes t he presentation o! Shakes·
peare's As You Like It, the crown­ing
of the May Queen, and the
serving of re!reshmenis. 1"hcre
will be many celeb•·itie..s ttttending
the ceremonies.
The committees working on the
phtnl! for the day include:
Pageant-Cinlre Yarte1·, e hair·
man; Claire Ellen Mogenhan, 0o1'•
is Dierdorf, RltJJ Bettner, Mat•y
Knapp, MaJ•ie Mut·phy, Beverly
Jones. Marina LaNasa, Ro~emary
Connol', Dorothy ·wegmnn.
Reception - Agnes Murtha,
thnirmn.n; Betty Dooley, Virgin in
Gould, Jane K .. eekel, Rosemary
Welch, Jean Scha ntz., Rosemary
Dooley, Kathryn Cutler, Bctly
Keegan, liildred Okolowicz, Nancy
Herron, Alice Foley.
Refreshments-Catherine Foley,
ebah·man; Maureen Henry, J enn
Kreber. Mary E. Lee, MtH'Y E.
Danehy, Helen Mary Bauman,
Helen Rauber, Kntherinc Rogan.
Publicity-Louise Bcnhon,
chairman; Madeline Nuccitell i,
Al)•ce Madden, Marth<l Gallagher.
Charlocte Bruyer, Peggy Beal,
TCJTY O'Connor, Edna Sot·(mdo.
Decorations - Betty Driscol1,
chairiJian; Margie K .. aus, Wilma
Beeman, Barbara Schreck, Kntie
Fiseher, Mary Jeanne Meyer, [.()i!l
Stollet·, Betty Cloonan.
Announcements.-Jean Cappel·
lino, chairman; Mary Dedie, Fran·
ces Ennis, Elaine Mulcahy, Ticki
Giannini, Roseanne Forward,
Marie Hn!ne1·, Anne llolarie SU.uf·
fer, Betty Thompson.
Pl'oeession-Honey Mei!Senzahl,
chairman; Jean Flanagan, Pat
O'Gudy, Marie O'Bden, Mary
Ann Lane, Thet·esn .Riley, Rita.
Davis, Jean King.
Programs-SbJrley Woodma11,
chairman; Belen Dorcbak, Corinne
Freer, AVl'il Cochrane, Ro$emary
Loritz, Eleanor H unlphrey, An­geline
Comfort.
Attendant's Costumes-Virginia
Klee, chairman; Dorothy Smith,
Rosemary Bell, Cynthha Smith,
Jane Gntrney, Loyola Nolan, Mary
Schenk. Dawn Healy, Jeanne
Whitley.
Flowers-Frances Guli, chah·­man;
.Mario DiGiorgio, Jeanne
Cbiavnroli , Marion MauJ, Mary F.
Carroll, Jane Gleason.
May Pole Dance-Helen Max.
we.ll, chairman.
Finance~Belty Keegan.
Cle.an-UJJ--MAI'Y Ann McGuire,
chairman; t he ent ire F1·eshman
Cl,....
That's everythjng in a nuL">hell.
All we need to really put the Day
over is 100% cooperation on the
p.ut of the student body! Let's
evel'ybody get in and help. Watch
The. Gleaner lor further announce­ments!
1'his is the second in n series of
l'eports on post~war opportunities
to .. college won1en made by om·
pJaeement. d irector, Mi.151> Eva
Sch reine•··
Probably there is no field o{
scientific •·esearch where mo1o.e
progress has been made during the
wm· period than "electronics,"
especially radio and its; related
fleld. television. With the inc•·ea.s­ing
importance or aviation in both
offensive &nd defensive modern
wa.rfllre, industrial enginee1.·s have
made amazing strides in develop·
ing entirely new features in 1·adio
trnnsmission and conb·ols, which
tn-e necessary in the precision op­erations
of military aviation.
In the. po$t.war period theM t·e·
markablc improvements and ttd·
vane:es will be divert-ed to civiHan
J)ut·poses in the amusement, edu·
eationnl nnd scientific fie lds. Tele·
vision, likew"ise, which was just
being int1·oduced commercially
when the wnt• broke out. has been
perfected because of the neccssi·
ties of war, and bent o.gain the
civilian populaiion will t"enp the
benefits in the JU)t5t.wa•· period.
With the scientific developments
and imsn·o"eme.nts in civilhm radio
and television equipment., modern
advertis ing will develop incl'eased
uses, nnd with inct·eased consum­er
demand ther,c m·e likely to be
new and intet•esting developments
in pl'Ogl'am planning.
Apart from the opporlunities
fo1· woman scientist..:; in the field
o! l'adio manuracturing and tech·
nical '"o•·k in radio stations, which
has been opened to them during
the Wit1· period, the program field
!iihould off'e1· widely inereas.ed op­portunities
tor college women.
The National Broadcasting Com.
puny has recently circulated un nr·
ticle prepared for Broa.dca•ting
Magadne by Clfll'l!nce L. Menser.
Vice-President in Charge of Pro·
grams, •·elative to college radio
cour!;e);J the gist of which is that
Lhese courses should contain more
background work and less techni­cal
training. He docs not say that
Jesus Condemned
To Death
The etowd is suddenly and dc...'ldly
still.
A nightmaJ•ish, oppressive. hostile
lull-
The water trickling over hands
sounds dull
And Pilate's !earful heart t urns
cold with chill . .•
The Jew~; have fl'ightened him with
"Crucify!"
And yet he knows this man is inno­cent,
Jesus1 who stands holy, f:p·eat nnd
..spent,
Jn s ilent. height - he condemns
Hirn to die-
Oh, Jesu~. J esus. you have still to
1(0
A long, hard way until the end
will come-
Only condemned you are ; and
death is slow-
Your burning heart with agony is
nunJb-
But shadows, gloomier than the
g~·ave,
Rise: all the souls ol men you
came to save.
M. Bed '46
the eo11eges have not made a
worthwhile contribl.Jtion, but !eels
that college CO\ l i'SCS genc1-alty arc
doing things they shouldn't at-­tcm)>
t·, while neglecting some o(
the obviou$\ things the)• a•·e quali·
tied to do. Comparing radio to
rnedicine, he mak es the J)oint that
every •·eput.able colle..ge which
wnnts to mnke n cont1·ibution to
the field of medicine, otTe•·s pre~
medical courses, t hese courses
being built on the theory t hat
every good doctor should have a
bltckg .. ound of genenll in formation
about the human body, about
chcmistl'y nnd a lot of othet· thinJ,.'S
(Continued on Page 4)
SCOOP!
FLASH!
The rctUJ·ns on the voting fot•
May Queen attendants have just
come to the GleanCl·. \Ve can bet'e
make known the two e.hosen from
each oC the fout· elnMc-s, but the
name of the May Queen must be
withheld until May 8.
Re1·e they al'e: Fresbmen, Nancy
Ret·1·on and Aliee Foley i SOJ>ho·
mores, Helen Mary Bauman nnd
Mmy Cathct•ine Fisher; juniots,
Jane Lally and Martha Sheedy;
seniors, Bett>• Doole.)• and Virginia
Sullivan.
Nazareth Red Cross Ut~it
Will Donate Blood
Once ngiiin, the blood bank has
issued •·equest3 Cor blood donors
.f1·om Na~nreth College. Rernero·
bering how well the Naznrencs
turned out last ye.;:u·, the Red Cro$&
is eonfident that the Mme. !;pirit
will be shown again.
Arrangements are being nHtde
for the day~students to go to the
Red Cross center in gl'oups of ten.
The resident student& will go to
the center on some Satut"day in
the ncar future.
Alumnae Receives
. Maryknoll Habit
On March 7, the r.,.st of St.
Thomas Aquin as, Edith Wilson of
the class of '43 received the habit
of the Maryknoll Siatet-s, or mol'c
specifically, of the Foreign Mi~­s
ion Si$ters of St. Dominic. Her
name in •·cligion is now Sister
Mary Edward Mn1·mion.
The cc. .. emony took place Rt 3:30
P. M. in the chapel of the Mother·
hou:;e of the :\taryk noll Sisters at
Ossining·On·the·Budson. The Mo:st
Reverend William F. O'Shea of
Ma1·yknoll officiated . .BishOJ) O'­Shea
is one of twelve missionary
bishops consecrated b)t Pope Piu.s:
Uehearsnl~third annual
SRO musical show are now under
way. The play wa.s written and h~
being dit·ceted by J can Schantz.
The daneo routines a t·e under the
dil·ection of Joan Duga n. Doris
Oierdorf has c haa·ge of the music.
Rita Bettnet· has assumed l'CSpons­ibility
ot stnge manuger, nnd AJice
VtmdeVoorde is business manager.
The c~st includes Betty Keegan
as Kristina, Kay Tcmmerman R$
Ony. .Marilyn Moore ns M iu C.
O'Toole, Jane Thurston as Daphne
Prentiss, Nancy Brown a::~ Aggie,
and Jean WhltJe)' a~ Put. Ed and
1"om Keenan, W(lll known to Roch·
ester theatt· e-goer~ . play the roles
of Kevin ttnd the biology J)rofessor,
a·especUvely.
XII in L939, and is reeently r e­turned
i1·om his pasto~·nl duties in
China.
Also in the cast m·e Marion
l1aul, Marja Berle, )Jar)' Esther
Dnnehy, Kuy Foley, Doric Anne
Reverend E. J. Lintz of our Flnherty, Joan Dugan, Doris Dicr·
faculty was prese-nt for the cet•e .. dod, Jnne Lally, Dorothy Argen·
mony.
Edith was Viee-Pl'efeet of the
Sodality nt Na~nreth College last
year, and during her four.year
s tay here. she was adept at ba!i­ketbnll
, displaying at once an en·
thusiasm for the game and true
sportsmanship. Sister Mary Ed·
ward Mal'mion reeeived a Bachelor
of Science degtee here with a ma·
jor in Chemistt·)•.
tieri, Rosemar), Bell, Nancy Her­a
·on, Alyce Madden, and other$.
Several song8 have been writ­ten,
including "Memory o( You"
by Rita 8ettner; " J'm \Vttlking on
Air., b)1 :Fran Guli; "This Is the
Night for Day Dreaming" by Doris
Oicl'dori nnd J ean Schantz ..
Joan Dugan and Claire Yarter
will do a specl a.cular dance routine
to "Lullaby "' the St.a•"'" by Oo,.is
Dic•·dorf. Joan has also arranged
They lttughcd when 1 st..a1·ted to several dance t•outines for the
make a new kind of dynamite, but chorus which includes 1·epresenta·
when l dropped it, they exploded. tives {rom e~c h class.
r-:.t ~[~~.n~~m~~gi~io:~~;n-e-xt-ye-.-.--.-+
Ft·eshman Class?
Have you invited you1· (riends in yout O\vn parish and in the
Senior Class of your High School Alma Mater to come to Naz- f
areth next year? t
Have you told them all that Na1.areth College has to olfer? t
I Do they knew.• t.he co-urses that are JSCheduled?
I If you can't nnswe1· uYES" to all t hese q uestions, may we I suggest that you begin now to interest you1· fr iends in coming to I Na:ear eth. If each student would contact at least one high school
ff senior, the type of girl who wouJd become an ideal Naztn·cth Col· I
lege girl, you would all be pl'oud or the Class o! 1948.
+-----------~-----~------
2
THE G LEANER
NAZARETH COLLEGE
PubliC"allon Oftieo: Ceorg\'1 1\ Burn'~ P 1'e1'!1t, Inc .. 40-r.l Nol'th Wulcr St.
~====~ ·..e.
VOL.. XIX THURSI)AY MARCR SO, 1941 No.5
=========== ~======
Publi•hod )lonthl>•
Tbe Student-s of Na::areth Col1ege. Roehe.ter. ~- Y.
hDITOJt.JN.CHUW HUiiiNt:l'lK MASAC:t:R
J .. ., ... Chlav.roll Mt~rw•rh e 1\rau•e
oori. Di~rdort
NV.ws ,.;onoR
Narr lblt~eouhl
Pt!ATliiU. JmrTOR
X..f'Mai'J' Wdds
~()('lt:r\' EDITOR
C'-1«' \'ut..-
SPORT'S J;OITOK
llorothy Wettman
111-.:AO ,.Vl'IST
Ma.ry Ltoone
51'01t"rS
l,uC'IIte tlbdhhon
JNn lAnnon
JOin o~un
Mar,. J,..••• Meter
Ph,IUa P .. :u
,w.,)' Kt"lh'
A!4SOCIA 'rl~ Y.I)ITORS
ltUMOR lr.DITOH
lot.rlly!l MOO""
AJ.t1M'SA:·~ F.DITOU
Ma• -, K. Ufll.ly
"~'ltl Jlttley
\IUSIC lo~OJTOK
UtoU)' K~ar~
l'I<:'TI'R& EOITOR
J~abl .. r. O'Cr.cb
ANT t;.OlTOit
JhdtolhK- Nta«itif4H
HHAMATIC EDITOR
J"" 84-lt.aeta
I.IT•:KAH'f EDITOR
.\lur tom.bllnlo
CtR('Vt4ATIO'Iro: MANAGftll
U•v•rlr Jonn
1-~X('IIA~aa~ tmtTOK
NltUtlft• lAo~IUUt'
MniJI R.-rle
Uorolh)' Smith
U11rba,.. S.du~k
IIH~f'lr MtCoa-.11
.Nary Sdt~nk
:'\t;WS STAFF
,.._. .. ,...... .. u~ary
,.. ,..,..., Wd~--rmon
Vlr•dnla Iii«
·r•r-•a RII•Y
"FA1'Utc:t; STAFF
Mart .. VI Geor•lo
IIUfUNI-.:SS S'TAf'F
llt'UY Orio~C'OII
.lantt Lally
l.orol• N•ln
Martha Sbffdt
flo.~~eo-• ll•tdrr
11•1•" RauHr
1-tlldrt<oJ (Ucuh•wln J.,an Kt>hnltrl
fitl{'lt;•r y !)TAPf
t:Jalra t:ll.-n MoJC~nhan &ohrtha GaUac hcor
1943
NV!otiC: ~TAf'"l''
Hto••..,•f1' Scllttloft
=====~~so;,;;c;..::io!C'rl CollPe.iale Press
We Really Need It
1944
Recently we have had hurled at UR the word s pirit !
Spit·il! SPIRIT !-And why?-because we just haven't any
spirit, and we need it! !
We. the edito1'S of this paper, have never attended any
othet• college, so we arc not claiming to speak from ex­perience.
llowever, it doesn't seem to us thnl other college
girls hnve to have "whe•·e is your spirit '/" th•·own at them
a ll the tim e. Spirit is something thnl should be in us. We
should not have to have it talked into us.
We should be behind our school, pushing it for wa•·d,
making it a bigger and better school! Then someday. we
could look back and exclaim. "Nazareth College! Why,
that's my school! That's my old Alma ) later!"-And then
we would send om· dnughte•·s back to Nazareth-because
it is our school and we love it!
Maybe we are speaking of a quite distant futu re, but
Jo,·ing Nazareth goes fo1· the present. too. Sure! We're a ll
young 11nd happy and full of fun. and that'~ just the way
:-:'11zareth wants us to be. She doesn't want us to be dead­heads
by any means. but she doesn't want us to be fool­ha•
·dy either. She has always been behind us in all our so­cial
alfn i•·s, and she alwnys will be if we back her up in
the things she wants- the things s he's asking us aren't i)ig
sacrifices. the;v' •·e just lillie t hings (and all {or ou•· own
good. too!)-
Think for example. about cutting a ci&S3 and jabber­ing
in the Social Room !-Taken indh•idually, it's no one's
los" but our own. but. take 250 cut classes se,•e•·al time~ a
week. nnd why! it's enough to knock a ~chool •·ight off its
foundntio n. After all. we gel as much out of school as we
put into il. and we should make it om· business to gel as
much out of it as we can.
Life is what we make it, kids-and that goes for col­lege.
too!
Lent For The Duration?
Ye:. the season of Lent is a lm o~l ovc1· for the yea •· of
1944. Has it been a well spent six weeks? Every year we
say that we'll sacrifice more and deny ourselves more next
year. Ha\'C we kept our promise to ourseh·es? Was this
~·ear better than last? We ha,•e one week to prO\'e the
answet".
Lent, after all, is the one lime d ur ing the year when
Cnlholics give m~re thAn the usu11l amount of thought to
the spil"itunl side of thing~. This period reminds us that we
must work for the spiritual rather than the material. It
ghows the need of uniting ourselves in the spirit of pen­ance
with the redeeming work of Christ. Through fasting,
mo•·tificalion. acts of charity, and spiritual exercises, we
aESociate ourselves mot·e closely with that wot·k of Christ.
Ou•· souls so easily lJccome sla ves to the wol'ld with its
Til£ GLEANER
AMERICAN
ANTHEM
By DOLORES BENNETT '47
I don't w~tve fiaJ(1J
.\nd make pretty ~~f'C'htfl.
But I'm thinking o( the boy$
On the South Pacific booch.,.,
\Vhot America •·eally iA
We have neve•· known­'
l'nklnK things Co1· fei'Mlted,
L.. i k(' childl'en ovenc,·own.
If I ,.. • ..., .. ked
I would probably •ay • •
Amerit:a is freedom,
Our Cree right·Of·\lia)~
Sto1·cs on the tOl'Oet•,
C'oplJ on t he beat,
l)QiiveJ')' t1·ucks.
Ancl children in the fltre('t,
Striving as alway~o
To get uuru~l,·es ahead.
Fu~e education.
.'\ place to lny our hend.
A deruoc1·atic lcAde:•·
To 11et. u.s a•·ight,
A Hg:ht to turn on
In the blatkness or nifl'ht.
h'a the right to learn,
And uy what we Hkt.
It'• t.he pleasun of a bo)·
(ionlK otT on n hike,
A t.uin passinJt by
Throu,~th eity and t.tation.
The ri(lht to help
In the progreu o( t.ht nation.
Hotdogs and homburlt"'.
The cin;u!\ in town:
The jo)t we f\nrl
lu watching 11 down.
ll'11 Jim and Joan
To be married in the iprin~r,
h '• likin« or dit-likintr
Sinatra or Bing,
To lake aS- we ple,.~t·
Fl'ee ru nning water,
The right or • fnthCI'
To rhca·ish his dt\ughte•··
A dear lillie <hild
In 1U mother'l\ cart',
A ehanct" to go to thur~h
Tn otTer up a prR)'t:~r ,
J L ., income tax,
Unnkl( c1ofoling at threfJ,
Chri11ttnR! c.heel'
With a Christma<a. trt'<~.
Tht Cunn)' hats
That our women wt>ar,
C'hHdren on the LTo11e)'
l·'or only hal£ ral·e.
h 'r- tnHslf: on a lot,
.\ hou~e 15UlndinK then.•:
A aimJJie porch
\\'ath .w lounging- ~hair.
Atnerie:a is a JOigh
On ~vtryone's liJ~­It'M
u n.'!f1·c.shing drink
1'hot n newtomc•· sipM
I'll bet Lhe boys
On thf' South Pacific hto•cht!t
Would like to and could
.\tak(' Car better s~eeh<' "~-
BuL I'm saying thi• rot• Lhcm
And I'd like to say mo•·e.
'l'o help people know
1'hat t..her-e ls a wor.
~o I tAke time out
Th.at our boy .. may kno"'•
Our prayers ~re with them
Whet-ever they ~to.
quickly passing pleasu•·cs. During this Season, lhe Church. They'•·• •pelliug Amcl"ien
in ils Li turgy. shows us Our Lord in the desert, and in I With • eopital "A"
His Public Life. fighting to deliver us from the triple chain And I'd like to think
of pride, luxury, and a\'arice by which we are bound to Tho• •• what the)' pra)' · · · ·
created things. When, by His teachings and sufferings, He .
rescues us from ou•· captivity and restores us to the liberty IA Amh~1"'8c' Amerl••• 1 • • • ... t o every aru
The weeks gollY quickly. We scarcely realize it when
Easier morning antves. But we can't SlOJ) there. Our Lent
thi~ year is fo•· the :pul'lltion-til a Cht"i~lin n Peace has set­tled
ove���· the la nd. We must continue ou•· prayers and sacri·
flees. Remember. the very foundation of the pending Sec­ond
Ft·ont iM the Prayer F1·ont.
W~r-Time Easter
Tn a lmost the Sl\l!le breath in which we talked about
pennnce and mortif\c~tion fo•· Lent, we arc ~roin!r to speak
of the significa nt glory and majesty of !':aster. We. as
Catholics. arc not concerned with Easter as n field dav for
soring fashion displar-rather we look at it as the spring
of our spiritual life, the spring in which the seeds of prayer
and ~elf-denia l sowecl in the forty days prior to it bloom
fo•· us into the beautif)ll flowers of G•·ace. How wonderful
it is lo have sp•·ing iq jhe w~rld coincide with the spring
in om· souls!
On the glorious ~lisle•· morning, we exult at the Res.
, urrection of our Saviour-the act which ga\'e final efficacy
and meanin!l' to all the e,•ents in the life of our Lord. For
mot! of us, the joy we feel as we participate in the gloriou~
Mass of Easter will be somewhat dimmed because of the
absence of someone dol\1'. But this diminished joy will be
supplemented by hopCl nnd fa ith-fa ith lhut our Risen
Snviou•·. the Prince of Peace. will soon give the world the
day of Victo•·~· and the j::nster of lasting peace.
Li_,colq-A Man of God
Ab•·nham Lincoln opec 8aid, "God must have io,·ed the
common man, Cot• he tnfldC so many of them." ln saying
this. he revealed his twp ~reatest interests in life. God a nd
1\lan. His love for people and his devotion to the cause of
freedom. justice and eq~ality among men re<cardless of
thei•· origin and spiritual beliefs. is a perpetual inspiration
to the champions of brot~e•·ly love and the •·espect of the
dignity of man.
History recorcj& comearntively little of Lincoln's spit··
itual and •·eligious life, Ull~ that he was a d evout student of
the. Bib.la and a regular church-go:r the re is no dou~t. His
belief Ill God was profound. a3 tS amply proven m his
deeds. speeches and letters He had no permanent church
affiliations. for he at~ended services of all denominations.
from revi\'al meeting~ (ll ~he mor<' or less cstablish~>d P•·o·
testant churches of his d!lf· The conflicting mun-made doc. I
trines of these vnl'io4s ppnominations d•·ovc him more and
more to •·ely on his own interp retation of the Bible, and. of I
the preachments of Cllriat. That he derived a true meaning
from the words of Goq, Is shown in his strict adhet·ence to
the golden rule. Thu~ )liB faith in God ga\'e him the cour­S'Ie
and willingness tp eerve mankind with a serenitY of
''ision that was to dispel Jhe clouds of wa1·, hate and in­tolcmnce,
and sec the lll'ighl horizon of pence, freedom
a nd justice to all men.
Lincoln's biographers, interested only in his political
career. have failed t~ elaborate on the true source and
foundation of Lincoln's philosophy. the Holy Bible. It would
be inte1·esting to learn what Lincoln thought of Catholicism
or if he eve•· tried to embmce the faith, but this thought
must go ununswered for no autho•· gives any light on thi~
~WHL I Lincoln's mild D11\!ll1Ct' and unr uffled composu•·e be-lied
the power and detQrminalion he possegsed which was
to ~a,•e the Cnion. Surrounded by insidious and petty asso­ciales
who tried to belittle him at every turn. he tactfully
and with unerring judflment rallied his erstwhile ct·itics to
his Kide to help him wjlre the ,\·ar against the forces that
tried lo destroy ou1· American her itage, Ft·eedom. May his
Sla ttn·e grow forever.
CHESTER J. CHI AVA ROLI
Dear Students.
The No\'ena of Gr11ce has come to a successful con·
elusion. And, probably unknown to us. some unbelievers
1
may ha\'e received the p1·ccious gift of Faith through our
intet·cession.
This yeur's Novel)!\ wus one of the most devo ut and
well tlltcnded in the ~ifltory of the Fr emin l\1 ission Unit.
The nine days of praypr we•·c opened by out· Bishop with
a sermon on the life of Saint Francis Xa\'ier; nnd through·
out the No,•cna, :'\azarenes were very zealous about pa•
ticipating. The spiritu,j exercises were concluded very fit.
tingly wilh Benedictio11 or the Blessed Sacrament given by
Fa ther l.intz.
We thank you Cor you•· generous coopct'll lion in mak·
ing the Novena of Grace and in celebrating Sl. Patrick'$
Day by attending the ttl~; and we ask you to •·em ember our
Field Day which will be coming soon-to pray for its sue·
cess and to do all you can to make it a worthy mission
effort.
THE GLEANER
Spanish Studes Hear
Brazilian Senhora
3
! ems Bears His Cross
Re takes a ct'os."' to beat· to Calvary
''Like a page out of Vogue." His back is bent benenth the
That's what the girls said after mighty load
they heard the intel"C$ting talk Hi& foot-steps plod along, Elis cap..
given by Mrs. Balzer at a recent tOl'S goad
meeting of the Spanish Classes. Rim to a fastel' pace to pa)• the
Having 1·eside.d in Sao Paolo, fee
Bt·azil, {or over eighteen years, Set fo)' salvation from our ways
~h·s. Balzer spoke like a true
"Brazilian," emphasizing the gr(!at
beauty~ the brilliant color both in
nuture and in the JX!Op1e, and their
deep love for this gl'eat South
American republic. ''One does not
simply say Brazil/' she said, be t·
blue eyes twink1ing, udown there,
on earth,
While Jew1; on every side mock
Him nnd jeer
Not wanting to understand His
mission here
And making up this eros.~ for Him
since birth.
everyone says in a low, a lmost So when we think of Ri_s gnat
reverent tone, Bna-zil !'' sacrifice
Although iMn;. Balze1· speaks We must reco.JJ He bore the eros~
t>ottugue-tSe fluently, she and her fot· us
son Michae lJ eldest. of her fout· Out sins the heavier !or 1111 the
Brazilian-boJ·n children, attend
Mec hanics Institute where the)'
•re studying the g .. arnmatical
structure of the language. ••They
arc my star pupiJs/' pt•oudly smiles
Pro(esso•· Angeline Guzzetta.
Mrs. Balzer said that the people
of Sout-h ArrH!t·ic.a are very kind and
''ice
Now spreading in this modern
wo1'1d of lu15t,
Anger, gluttony, and greed, a
world gone mad
But saved by one Man Whom we
made so sad.
Cl ... o£ '46
hHiustrious. She toJd an amusing ;r,tr,;Y.!t~?~t':?;\;Y.:'W'~i;.;'~(t;-t.;.,.~~~.;,~;~~!:.;.{;fl
little anecdote about a Brazilian
Hele n Macchit~, Ruth Lorenz, and Jean Se-hants. Co Travelinr maid whose "only ambition was
to become n housekeeper." The
Back n(tcr nn evenLJul and exciting t-rip to New Yo1·k al'e Ruth lowe,. middle class desire nothing
Lorenz, Belen Macchia, seniors; and Jean Schantz. junior. This tt;o, Sodality Stre·et more, and fervently aspire to ful-members
of the Forensic Soeiet)• of Nazareth College, took p~ll't in n Mass, Holy ~u-nion, Mental fill their ambitions a$ competent
debate ftt Good Counsel College. Prayct·, wet·e stressed by sodality servants.
The senior Nazat•enes took the The Btazilian~ insist upoo being
n.g.· ,·ve ,·n t•e debate: leaders in observance of Vocation called The United States of Braz. . " Concert Features Week In Student Hour on March b . h
Re~;olved: Thnt the United Sta.tes h J 6 " skit was pJ•esented 5hOwing il, and claim we over ear our t'·lgl t Sbcm1d Participate in an lnterna· T C h a ikO WSk y's 4t the importnnce of deciding upon iUnn ittehdi nSktiantge s.o u81r'sae~livl'ess larlghec. coitn.i eys
~~n~t.p~!~·n~or~~i:!::~t;~• ~::.~ On Thursday evening, llarch 9. ~~: a~~:~~~~n!n:ap•~::i~l ,.::;~i~; are much like ours, and the land
)lacchia and Jean Schnntz took the Rochester Philharmor)iC wa.s is sp·rinkled with many pictuJ.·e.li<lUe
d bl d' . h,.• ... rd in .,. ... next to the last con· from just wandering into one of !!!mall towns with quaint Indian
part in a roun ta c IS<:U&S.ton ,.__., ws the states in life and beinK a mis· names. ?.it"S. Balzer was. al'nused to
on the Question of whether or not cert o! the season. Judging !-rom tit find so many people of the belief
the pl·esent tendency to eentralit- the en thusiastic opplause of the ln combination with this, a pap- that Brar.il wns infested with
ation o{ power by the 1-"ede.ral audience it Will-i an extl'emely suc· er was read on q ualifications and snakes and wild animals that lit.
~ Gove•··nment is a thl'eat to A mer- ccsslul perro,.mnnce. considet-utions in choosing n car· erally ct·awled "al1 ovel' the
I ican Demoel'aey. Mr. Itu1·bi opened the program eer. Father Lord's pamphlet, "Row )>lace." There "'"' wild animals,
The debattH"S le!t Io•· the tour with Bach'~ Chol'ale P1·elude, "Wir To Choose a Successful Career" of coutse. but they nre whe
1
·e they
on Wednesduy nft.e•·noon, ~itu"Ch glauben all' em e inen Gott!' AJ. wa~ reviowt!-d by th(l: Sochalit.y JU'(\ would naturally be, in the innu
22. While in New Yo1·k, they though this work was originally feet. Mary Jane Schwartz, jungl~ tel·ritory. •'The greatest.
atnyed at the Barbi~on Plnza and written for the organ, the orches.-- Western N. Y. Sodnlity Conven. di!iturben;:," she said, uare t..hc in­telUI'ned
late Sunday ni{rht, Ma-rch tral transcl"iption. by Ph 1 1 i 11 tion was held in Buffalo on March sects. 1 think Brazil must have t.he
26. In the intel'im, while they were James, was unusuaUy effective. 19 at the KleinhAns Musie Hall. greAtest number of insects in the
not debating or d~scussing, the The highlight of the evening A delegation of Sodnhst.s from world."
girls attended. \'arJous theatre~ wa$ the presentAtion oC Tchaikow. the College attended. The. subject I However, the people ttt•e ehect··
(one play whiCh they saw W&$ sky's f'Otllth Symphony in F. Min- ~ under discussion was lnteracial ful and happ)' They love thetr
Othello), movies (one of these 01·. Th1s symphony, which was com- JuEJtice, wh1C:h is very timely since land deal'ly, and r·-esent any dem­was
the s,ong of Be•·nadettc). and pleted in 1878, was dedtcated to it is recognized that ucial and na. onstratlon of fol'eign super~onty.
many l'adlo b•·o:tdcasts. Mme. Nadcja von Mech, one of L1onnl ptcjudices must. be .aban-' They have a great sense of hum-
The girls bad an excellent time Tchaikowsky's close friends. doned in 01-der to have men hve or, and delight in making the
while away and ha\'e. e xpJ•essed Of the fo\Jr movements, the in common bl'otherhood. Por·tuguelie the b1·unt of all theil'
their t!nthu.si~sm foJ• having ~ad 1 third and £oul'th were particularly On Tuesday MaJ'Ch 14th the jokes. Mrs. Balzer gave an am us ..
the oppol·tumty of rcpresentmg outstanding. The third movement, Lit.el'atut•e Committee or the So· ing illustration of this by telling
Nazareth on t.he tour. I the pi~~icato ostinato, was dis- dalit.y had an interesting and in· nbout a Portuguese who on a very
,...,. ., • •, . •, . . ,.%~~~=:-z~~~.f~·:~!·•=-•=Y.=•·:··=••,!••·····~.. ~ played to its best advant.age by formative maeting while. TC\•iewing •·niny day was tr-avelling in an
=.;v;.<'2;r.:- • ~. • • .~. · ""· "· .;r.,Y".~r.~ the Ol"chcstrn's tine string section. five diffcl'ent Catholic authol"s and open street car, snd .sitting in the
J F 1/s The 1st Time Special mention •~ould also bo giv- the it· works.
esus a en to the woodwmds, which per· E•·ica Klemens was Chairman to Mis.s Schreiner or Sister Rose
The slope ahead foreboding cruel formed with the utmost com· 8nd Yolando Romano led the dis. Angela so that th'!Y may be sent
torment, pctcncy. The entire onhesb:a eussion. an invitation.
Your cross, a J)Ondetous mass of reached n high degl'c~ of briltiane:c
guilt and shume, and vigorou!5nc.!S in t.he exciting
You fell, yet ft·om Yout· lit)S. no finale.
word of blame Also heard we-.·c "Spil"ituals,,.
Was Ulle.J•ed, as down in agony for string ehoi1· and ot·chestra, by
you bent. the young American composet·,
YoUJ· henl't by pain and sin alike Morton Gould. This wol'k wa~ d i·
was ren t vided into five movements entitled:
As soldiers, not to aid your an- Proclamation, Sermon, A Little
guish, eame Bit o£ Sin. Protest, and Jubilee.
But just to strik~ you, CU1'S.C Your Bits of neg·ro folksongs we1·e evi·
sncred name, dent throughout the composition.
While praye.l"$ unto Youl' Father The use of a mild boogie·woogie
lor them went. pat..tern in the last section, Jubilee.
The weight of sin was gl'eatel* t.han
the cross;
Yet even as You fell, You prayed
for me.
I know that I hnve brought about.
that loss.
L feel it, even as J look and sec
My $in$, still great, stiU heavy in
offense.
0 God. rlease let mo pay you
recompense.
Class of '4G
''We'U hnve to rehea1'Se that, ..
said the unde1-taker a.s the coffin
fell out or the c.a1·.
Mary had un Elgin watch.
She ! wallowed it-it's gone;
Now every time that Mnl'}' walk!S,
Time mat·ches on ...•
onee morco proved Mr. Gould's abiJ.
ily to utilize successfully jazz ef­(
eets in his eompositions. The
work was, on the. whole, well re­eeived
by the audience.
Afl·. lturbi brought the concert
to a c lose with three orchestral
numbers from "The Damnation or
Faust," by Berlioz. 'fhese wc·re
the Minuet, The Dance of the
Sylphs, ;:~.nd the Rukacr.y March.
Cop-"flavc you a warning sig­nal
on the fl'ont of youl' car?"
Gil'l D•·iver-"Yes, sir-T hnve
a little sign thnt !S-nys 'Dodge
Brothers'."
ln Mas.snchu~et.ta u grovestone
bears the. following inseription­"
Here l i ~~ Dantist Smith filling
his last cavit\•."
For the next meeting each gh·l
will write ~ poem, !!$Say, o•· stol'y
i tiCOrpol'ating their Catholic views
and ideal:; on curr.cnt and import.­nnt
issues.
---<!l-­Aiumttae
Doings
On Saturday and Sunday, 1\lal'(;b
4 and 5 the nnn\Jal retreat for
NnzarcLh College Alumnae took
place under the capable direction
of the Rev. J ohn P. Delaney, S.J.,
of the staff of Americ:a.
Something your reporter nc.vel'
knew till now-the Alumnae has
chapter$ in Corning, Auburn,
Syracuse, 6uffnlo. and New York.
These chapters at·c usciul in that
they are doing active fot· our Col­lege.
The Corning Chapt~•· has enter·
tained 1Seniors lrom high schools
in their district and on March 26
the Aubu•·n Chapter entet•tained
g'irlfr! ft·om Auburn and surround­ing-
8tea at a ten. Some oC ou1·
music students gave & t•ecitnl,
movies depicting college: nctivit.ies
On Satw·day evening the retreat wereshown, and two me.rnbe1-s oC
was given for mnrried couples. our facult)' we\"~ present to an­This
proved l:lO great a success swer questions.
that thooe who attended request- _ __.. .....,_ ___
ed that they have another this If · f h r 1
coming fall and that it be fo&· a A atrs 0 t e ,-1·0.~ l_
whole day rathcl' than for just an I On April 20th, the Freshman
evening. rt was also suggested c1as.' will entc1·tain the Sophomo.·e
that each couple bring at. least one class at a rolle1· ~kating party. The
other couple. I chairmen fo1· this event arc Helen
'fhe usoul alumnae retre.llt was Mul'-rf!l' and Marino Grosser.
given on Sunday. 1.'his centered Upon completing their elec.­about
an understandi·ng of the t ions, the F1·eshman class oft1cers
Mass, and wa$ received very en· I for this yeal' arc.:
thusiastic.aUy. I President-Nancy Herron.
On April 16 the Alumnae Asso· Vice-President-Cynthia Smith.
ciation will cnt~rtnin pt•ospective Secretary-Eleanor 'Maloney.
student and theil· mothers at al Treasurer-Maut·een Henry.
tea. Any student knowing girls St~dent Council Representative
contemplating college for next. - Ahec. Foley
\'Cill* is; urQ'ed to aivf' thf'il• nnml'l~ PAt·liAm,..nhat'iAn-ln11n 'Pn,.,.,.n
most vulnerable spot, w:ls appar~
ently unaware of the fact that he
wns being dt•e.nthed very thorough·
ly. The conductor, approaching
him, asked him why he didn't
change his seat fot• a d1·ie1' spot.
The Portuguese, looking about the
isolaled car, indignant.ly replied:
"Change my seat! How ean lY
There is no one he•·e I can change
with!"
Asked if the Good Neighbor
Policy has done anything ror the
people o( Brazil. Mrs. Bal~e•· stat.
ed that it hn..-. done n1 uch to de·
cl'ease t.ho illite•·ncy of the people,
which in the pnst five years has
been •·educed from 84 to 75 per­cent.
She also :stJ·es.sed the fact
that the coming emphasis on lan·
guages will be on Spanish nnd
PnNngtJese, duo to tho inot'cta:;e in
Lt·ade with South Amcdea.
In conclusion, Ml'$. Buh:e1· ex­p1
·essed he•· delight in being abl(!.
to teU the people of her native
land all about Brazil-not with­out
adding thni. she is Cervontly
waiting for lbe day when 15-hc may
retut·n to "Bru-zil.''
A Whodunit
By MARY JEANNE MEYER
Time: The yeHJ' nineteen hun­dl'ed
and forty~four.
Place: Nta~nreth College - Sec­ond
Flool' Corridor.
Characters: ! ? ?
'Tis a dark and sto1·my mol'ning.
All is quiet and se•·~ne along the
$econd floo•· conidor. 1l is a
st1'8nge calm!
But lo, what is t.hat which comes
drj!ting slowly down the hall '! A
quc.cl' &nd haunting fragrance (?)
pernu~ates the utmosphet·e. For
seve1·al minute~ this stmnge
"being" is unnot.ic;ed. Some one
sniffs; is annoyed. Bang-a doot·
slams!
Then ft•om behind the. elosed
door emct·gc two silent fig\arcs.
They tt·ae~ Lhe i1·agu.nce (?) to
its source. Then, like J>agnns of­fering
sacrifice to a heathen god.
they bu1·n incense nnd sitenlly
leave.
The next day the sound of voices
mingles with the odors. ln fact,
,the voices &1'<! penetrating. So this
time, bang, bang- two doors are
s l~mmed.
(OtT and OJ) dw·ing the weeks,
the above scenes m·e repeated.)
An explanation is s.irnJ)Ie.
Fragram:e(?)- Mixtu1-e of Ra.­voJ-
s fl'Om the biology department.
1 ncense-'rwo students' method
fot· combating s.aid fragrance.
Voices-Two members of facuJ.
tv cooduct.ing their 1-espective
classes with OJX!n doors.
Par-t. or the mystery remains
Un$Olved:
Will the math department learn
biology? or
Will the members of biology
class become mathematicians?
4
THERE OUGHT TO BE A
LAW AGAINST THIS
By DAISY WELCH
Did you know
that t.ent is
nhnot~l ovea·
nnd soon
you can eal
Mtxicon aundae.s again
aip tokts
and ehew wad$ of gum
munch bonbons
(as if you ever stopped)
and you'll be
Lryin' to decide on
an Easter outfit-whet.
her t.o buy the
yellow auit or
pursJie c:oat to
bring out your eye$-
(und Bob'$ too-)
and whether
you'd look better
Jn a big wide hat
thftl hides your fact:
or
u pe rt Muey pill box
that shOW!.! more fnee
.nnd 1nON! you . . .
( llorroro!)
nnd ~SOOn vl\cKtion is over
and you sunt bn.ck to
books and teachers' repro\•inr looka
and then you ha\'e to read
this drivel again
and won't I eYer ~top
run nine on this way
and r refuse to spatter or uttu
another word ...
, ............ .., -.~ ..... ••-- L - - - .t\
• • • sco to th~ movies
und dnnc:e
n• the Collegciate Club
'til one---
• • • and whether
ht!'ll aeud .)'UU
a eo11!age of
camellias or orc.hids
and then
Easter morn dawns
amid a driuJe of rain
and you wear la~:t yea.r-•s
boggy ••lrtrY t weed
'and to top i~ off you had
to buy your own corsage . •
and did you e'•er read
auch a mess ..•
you nevel' did . • .
well, I'm Ins ulted
T H E C L E A N ER
Jesus Meets His
Blessed Mother
They could not know what she had
done,
The g-realea~ of all women born ,
Whose Hit waa all vowed to her
Son.
Whom othe1.. dn1•cd to hold in
~01"0 .
She ulone knew whnt belonged to
Hlr'n,
A heave nly klnxdom fn1· above.
And not the jeen from c•·owds so
dim,
Nor revenge townrd one ao filled
with love.
Helen Traubel Sings
With Philharmonic
Tbur.da)' evening, )larch 2,
mar-ked the date tor one of the
o utstanding- cont'ert.l of the season
gi"en by the Rc><heat~r Philhar­monic
Orc::hcstt·a with J oJe ltu .. bi
conducting. The conccn wa• not­able
for the excellent •lnglng or
Helen Traub~l, Wngne1·inn dl'a·
matle soprano who wrut lhe e ve­ning's
so1oi!!t.
The all Wagnerilm J)I'Ogr.am be·
ran with the Overture to 16Tann­hauser''
nnd w48 tollowed by the
•'SiegCried Idyll" MI .. Traubel'a
fi:rst offering wa1 F:laa'• dream
How could J hurt you thus, 0 from .. Lohengrin,'' and one real-
Mary, ixed her great ability after hear-
By harming Christ, the world's ing her flnt few notea. She P''e
light! : her interpretation of ''How Art
Yo\J help us even• day to carry I Thee Spring,'' fnHn .. Die Wal.
The heav.)' burden in whit'h )'OU de· Jrucre" t.ympathetlt'ally as we11 as
light. beautHuiJy. Jn the lmmo1Rtion
Help me to net, And t\n·n your sor· Scene from ••Gotterdammt J·ung"
row i\Ji!i!i Traubel was at. her best Be-
To jo)• today and on every mor- ~ide& h~r magnificent voice the
row. \Vagnednn eoprnno hod J1Ct•fcct
Class o( '46 stage 1u·e~encc ""d f1·om the RJ..,.
~.;?:;~:.;-,;;;.t.;w. ~;:...'\t:i,'\W:',;·~":"::.r.\~."";.;;~;~.v:..;;;:; plause one rould t.cll that the nu·
(Continued from Pnge 1) dience fully llPJ)I'<lci.-tcd the artist
that are ba1ie to his use ot vari· Sieg-tried't Dtnth Ma•·ch from
ou$ techniques which he lenrru .. Gotterdammcrunr:" and the Ride
later In a medical school. or the Va lk>•rfes from " Die Wal·
Continuing this analogy, he kuere'' proved favorable to its lis-­recommenda
that colletces should tenen and compJettd the program
not t~arh 1,rofwional technique5 '?"~";!~~"""'i!.":""t':'~. .i .. i""~"'-;··."';"'';'";"-"':'".;"':.; .t --:
but thould sl)f'nd the time on
coune• they are prtpared to teach.
For examJ)le, for potential ~Tit..
era in radio, college course!> can
do a tremendou• 1e1·vice b)' teach­Simo11
H elps Jesus
Bear His Cross
ing things which tan be lAughl It was not out. of kindntM that
about the bu:~ineu of wrh.int and the.)' A:ald.
which give n bar.kgtound !o1· •'lf~lp Lhoo this man le!!t he 11hoold
scl'ipt-writ..in~t. fi e comments on Cnll nnd di~"
the Iacl thnt. the JW('J·ngc writer No pity movtd them. or sound of
who Rl>pllct' tol' n job in script-- weal'y tigh.
writing hns ftJli>Brtontly neve.r The)' c:al'ed not t.hat ltit holy
Jt:arned very n1 uth ttbout the ex:· hruhPt' H Plllil
pert use o! word.s in picture!Sque Ac.hed from the crown of thorns
speech: that ht do<!sn'L know very Tht'!y led
much about. wnung for th:lracter Simon to help llim, but it \\ ... , no
tn~s. and halll ne,·er learned to c.r)'
stimulate his imafrination and ap. 1 Of pity from the women who drew
ply it. to hi" writing nigh,
Th~ !ollowlnr are tp~ifl.e &ug- Xay, 'twas they fea· cd rle mifltht
gestiooa Cor roun.u whieh would too soon be de~td
prove valuable for those who
"'·ould enter the radio field:
A radio w•·it.inrc c.ourse could
give a lot. of lludy tO dl·.amatie
et1'utt.ua·e nnd to plot. and sto1·y
linea. It 8hould involve •• edtfcal
.nmtlyais Of I)OI)Uinl' l'&d io shows,
both n!4 to theh· lttl·uctu•·e and a3
to their oudience acceptance or
rating. A CundRment.al writing
co\lne ahould give training in
adaptation of \'Arloua literary
works, w1th particub.r emphasis
on the probltm:l of Lran-;latintr ex·
I
Dear JeauA, would I too have fled
from pain
And Je ft :\-'OU lone t.o fate the
thrent.cning mob,
Or fated my deuth , the mlll')'tl''s
crown to fC'nin
With Thee. whom I know to be the
one t.l'uc God1
0 let me by my little deed• allay
The suffering renewed by you each
day.
Cia., of '46
(Continued on Paf(e 6) ~..;:.;...;..;:.:.-;.,.:;:.:..:.ut.!..;::.t.:.f.;
Jesus Falls A gai11
Our Sa\·iour we have struck c.
earth once more
NoV~• thrice our ships h•ve bornt
Him to the ground,
Jeering, mocking OJ)pressora ltftnd
around-
Hi& faltering au.·p~ they hn11tcn as
before.
Ou•· Lord is wenk ror He has Auf·
fercd so-
We find him prostrnte, lying thert
forlorn
Ae does not moan His fate: fie
bears tbe scorn
lnfticted on Him b)• Ilia own,
turned foe.
Oh Jesu:s:, Thou hast bomt 10
much for me.
Aast suffered so, yet thou dost not
tompJain. ,
Thy cross, Thy wo\lnda, the crown
of thorns to c:-ruel.
I ponder, seeing Thee bear the
r iditu1e.
Oh Jesus, Grant. me to love Thee
And never cause this bitter J)Oin
again.
Class of '46
KLUBBY KORNER
A supper meeting or the Oebat~
Club was hold on March 9. It took
the form of an informal di.ttuJo
sion or labor problemw, and In p.ar.
ticu1ar such quQtion• a.s the •d·
visabilit)' of incentive pay or tht
prac:ticabi!itJ• of piece work; the
repression of the dui~ for crt&·
th•e expe1iencea: int.erJ>reting the
employer to the emplo)·ce: and the
advont.age.c; and diudvantagea of
labor union,..
Ruth Lorenz Wl\111 chnh·mnn of
the discussion in which tho follow·
ing gil'ls from tt HochcstN· lndufl­trial
plant took part: Louise Mnc­B,.
idc, Ann McCollough. K a y
Slot·n. Olive Coldgrovo, €•th"r
Hi~k~y and Marion futnl.
Th""e taking part from the Col·
!ege were Helen Macchia, Jane
Kreekel, Jean Folt')", Ann Bogan,
Jean C•ppellino and Margaret Me·
Dermott.
Under the au_spices of the See·
retariaJ Clubt tbe students had an
opportunil)' to see Miu )Ja rgan~t
Hamma, the. world'& ~hampion l)'ll*
ist, hto1·e at Nazareth on fo"cb. 28.
M i!s Hamma dcmonRlrated her
typing technique in t.hc nudito•··
ium on an e leet•·omntlc L}'JlcwriL·
cr. She ah;o g-nve heiJ>(ul Muggrs·
tions th~t wj)J aid the IJX1Cd nnd
~ee u racy of the secl'etarial 8dence
major1-.
The senior 1ecretaria.l atudenll
offered their &el'vicu lo any girl
having diflieulti~ in mak1n1t out
her incom~ tax. after Studenttl'
Hour on March 8.
THE G LEANER 5
PRAYERFUL MEMORIES ~::t!!!::~~··i.!!~·~~~·~·"i~Ut~tr~fr.1r:1t~tfJt:..it...~.:.: Wrong Date
A Short Story
~bt atood a moment. thought·
tully. on &he tOI) •t~p •• the door
..... f the Po~t Offitf ttqueaked t~hut
I hind h~er. In her hand aht
utcbtd tightly a tom envelo~
addrtaM'd to "M~ Cathtnno- Dar.
1 Wla., T1ppmJ Town, :-\ J " and a
ttfl• •he-et of paper with tht
u ur4f. ''\\ • ~Jt'rN to inform )'OU
cued a little as 11he answf!t·td
··Cathy"
They didn't talk much that night
but they dancfil th~ rest of the
evf'nin« toa-ether, hill ~rs-istence
finally ¥~-inning out: the other fel­lows
•topped euuing They walked
home- tostether after the dance and
th~ night \\'8.1 cool and !r~h and
tht> 11tan: made it brigbL
\",.t<rday •h• had •klpPI'd light- That nigllt wu only a b<!gin-
I do•a tf'teu ,.me !llt'pt banttin« ninK. They went to aU the- Friday
hfo door loud!)'. happ)· bt<"av .. e of mght dant'(".$ together after that.
k two fat lett~"' ac.ldrt' ... ed ln the)· ..aw mo,'iet on Sauarda)'s.,
ht nni,bt up and down wt•tintc and Svndtt)~ they went on picnic!.
chl~ctt-ri"'-tic of Stt•\ e Today Graduation came And then their
.tat • ..., • new ~"on. and the Senior Ball.
hado•• of thl' u.d l<"hlnt hurt in The Stnior Ball was tbe big
tr heart flooded her usuall)' •mil· t-vent. of tht- tLC:hool Yt'J:Ir and t.he
112 fact- The twmklt> in her blue onl)' .chool dan~e held at the
"ll HI h11d dl.&aJJJ)eartd and the lonK aJIIteioul'l Countr)' Club. Cath)' wu
goldtn lat~hes clo"ed hhlf WA)'. A beAutiful in her Jlink net formal ,t Htl~e blue tam perch~d danKN'OUit· with s:otd sequin$ on it.s full skirt
tr on ,.hor t. blond curl11., n navy S lw wot·C' a gold and pink juliet
kut rmd blue Mweater. 11nddh.1 t'HJI on her aoft yellow eurl11. Her
!tl hoe.~ And "h01L blu~ .cotktl mndc eye~ dnnc·cd. her cheeks wea•t-
111 ber look le"' chan he•· eighteen ftu1thec.J. Steve wB!i tnll ttnd ha nd­)'
fiU'I, Hut t.oduy t he ~toft rl'd I'IOtl'\o and u bit Urltomfot·table in hi~
ft .moulh waA 'lobca·, tlltd the whhc· lUX. Together· they made n pretty
neM ot ht.!r' Jtkin mo1·c nHll'kt.~CI . pictu•·e as they whil'led IH'ound the
Reluttnntly l!lhe moved down !he drtnCl' tloo•·, wa lked a lo ng lhe tQt·­bJg
~~tane "'"~P" o ut futo tht a-u-eet t 1'4te 01' Atood utlking gail)• with
: ..\ pa~ing womnn MIOw(<:d n?t If to tht high .chool crowd.
stop ror• 0 few minute"' lnlk, bu~ Out that "'"" long ago. Now it
• tttlng the (AriiWt\)' look 011 the would be ditfe.·eni. She would
• flrl'l (II.C:e taulckl)' wnlkcd Oil. A hlW .. LO live in hc•r world of memo.
�� ,m•ll boy ca1me I'Unnfng nnd Jhout. riet. She would ne,·er have Steve
' 1ng down the ttt·eet follo\\-ed b)' ngam,
' thru mo1·~ hule boy11, dceJll)' tn· She kept on w•lking aim1t:ssl)•.
rrotHd in their gnmt o! Copa and not. noticing the familiar strnin!l
Robbert. A tiny whitt· and blatk of musk and the mixed voi~e!J o!
puppy atoJ)pcod to look at tht $tid, the Aehool kids floating Crom Mar·
ltopdully "·•~t•1n• h1.s hule uU. t)''a u ~the passed. She didn't even
but rHt:ived no ftitndl)• J)at hear Mr. Many when he called
~o. the .rirl had not -~en him ··K~llo" to her. On and on she
Dor the littl~ boys nor tht PAMing walk~d. her thoughts far A\\"A)".
woman. She wu walkmK" do"'" It wu Septembe-r now; the
thi• atrtt:t as tthe had done- hun· J•••mminc and eanoeang parties
cfrt"d.t o( hmH bdo.-.. but now it with Steve Wt'«" O\'et. The long
wu ditrerent, "be v.u diffeffnt, clay~ at the (arm whe~ they bad
the- •·orld \\'h dtft't~nt ••orkf'd and picnieked tol[ether
wue gon~ Th~ long summt:r
Aa •he •alkf'd ~tht thought ~hf! nittht.A wne J)e"t "''htn the yellow
~. .. ,. htrHif hand in hAnd v.ith a moon wu high in tht> sk)' and they
tall bJark-hau~d boy. Tht)' wtre had walked about the town and
•rniling and uJkrnJl, and hia C)'H ••lkt-d long Stlious thougbt5 about
laughed ._. ht H·bed htr about the life and the ~\.ate o( tht" world. It
U in 1-H!ltc>ry. Tht')' BlOJlJK'd at wA!$ !'()1)ttmb~r and only one week
Mnty's Sweet. Shop and we1·t 1oon wu lcfl to spend together.
!.IJipintr coke111 hnd talkinsc AIC fat1t And they we1·e con~tant.ly t.o ..
u J>ON~lblt'l ftmldst a fCI'OUp M ~11'1" gerber tho!i~ htNt seven day!'. They
and bo)'ll ta·om -chool Now t he \\ea-e hnpJ))' vi"iting each favorite
Juke hox ~sercccht•d out n Jive num~ nook in t he town for Lh<.' hat time;
be.- Hrtd (eN pountlcd to It" r hy· double dating with thi~ gi1'1 and
tbm. And then thl' feet. tltopped boy; Hitting find talking for hour
and ther~ Will' n low hum whl~e ()O end: doing nit t he thi':'lg4 th~)'
the fnvol'lte troune~· '"~"g thu htt hnd en joyetl doins: LOKcthta· Cor the
tunc o! Lhc• wC!ck. 'I hey wertl J)ll"t yenr.
young then, t hey wet e ('fi1'Cfrce.l .
On nnd on Cut h)' wnlkttl S he Anti now. ft wn~ the lngt n1Jth~:
was lltill youn~ bul h('l' l'lh'efrlll" tomo1 row Steve would be on h1s
daya were over. Sh~ toulrl no uny 1.0. A f~raway ~~t·my. camp. ~ e
fonKer walk Into MAi l)''A nnd be wu gomg to bt' a pilot. an the A•r·
hllpi•Y with her mNnOI'iea Now fort'('! Oh, Cathy wa.s proud of
tht:y would ru.t~h "tin in t(>tll .. to Steve, yet ihe ~b t<ad because he
hcor eyes. " Jt would he tesvmg htr n~w. She
• wa.a happy n n cl gay that m~ ht; she
Memone,. ye~ •he hud me'"o-· forced her hps to ~mite e\·en
ries. ~~ many of thtm: the re.ru· though her eye .. eould not. When
lar Frnlay nil(ht. dante• at tht ht bent to ki!\8 h~r goodby~ M
tthool trYm-thM.t. nl«ht whtn the I tht)' ttood in the 6hadows of the
Jurd lint mtt Steve. . Darwin porch. she 11miled up at
She •-u dant•ntr Af{&ln With him. But ._. he turned slowly
Brud Ben~&. and the u1ual erowd away from bt>r and then hurried
wtre dancrn• around tht-m A door , away dov.-n the steps and out into
ope~~d and '.~ walk.~d a tall un. thco •treet, the tears rolled tilently
f•m•har boy Brud. •he ••ld aft· down her chHk• She stood and
tr a mo!:'t,nt"• . .:lanee at t~.~. nt•· liAtened until tht footsteps fade'd
tomtr,. .•ho 11' that bo)' • ~ht Into the dark cauit!t night Then
had ••d 1t tareltMb. not tho-.·rn~ he turned and went :n-l>idt.
Mr more than UJ~ual lnttr\""' Brud
Jesus S tripped of D ear Kansas
By ALICE FOLEY '47 His GnrmeiiiS I __ The months had pas~l!d und let.· I am waiting you in A- well,
ten had come. She wu loneeonu~ rold cruelty awathed the hill, in a class. 1 know t hat t.s criminal.
but she \US happy and t:ontented, 'Uined red, but I am ofrerinJZ my ~orutanl ree1-
too She wrote often and Steve "You mu ... t du~ wtth nothing.'' they mg o! painful appre-hension up a.~
answe~d her letters alway,.. He I had Pid. penance . . . 11'15h UJ cen!Oring
had e,·e-n been home one~ for ttn 0 m) Cod- this She's Sitting nut to me (~r
days and they had done tht th•nll' T hey dta«ttfd Your prmenta otf I u.'\ual). Oh, l'0\1 know how it t•
they loved to do once apm - had And Your Jeered :~~lun; •.• so 1 can't say much ••• What
been happy u the)' al"'*>-. u"ed Your woundt rtntwed b)· •in, am 1 talking about! ! :
to be. Your body torn- Rosu are blue.
Catl~)· atiJJ went down to Mar. And th1.1 for me: \'iolets are: red.
ry•s and sat and talked with the May I dlt thUJ;. \\Oat am 1 doing
~rl! and boy.s that -.·e~ ,.-till home Strlp~d of all Out of bed!
She ·went to mo,•1e.s and picnict But Jo,•e for Thee. Wish the Prof. would stop look~
and partiH. hut 111ihto alv.·ay• Jane Tbui"Jton '46 ing chi$ way. ~· ... £,·en I, re~
thouJrhl oC Ste\'t and aiWa)'l' wtnt ~ ~,.,. ~ .. , , , ,. • ~ ~ ~ ~ 7 7 7 ~,. ~-,.~,. ..... tr~intd my free-dom with a l'iJrh."
in .the cro--·d .. They k.n.ew •he ".•• .......... $... ........ ,.. ..... .. .. ;._.,..,.....: .... ..... ...., So "•ng the immortal bard (an old
W81ltng ror him-~···"·~ ror htm Ltbra r y Acqutres ••llmato or mine).
to tome home: again to ,ata)· N F"l Gee, but it is beautiCuJ out o!
She W8!'t a1W8.}'1 happie"t when ew I e doors! ,.. . rom here 1 can l'iec the
~be s.kipJJed down the po!l office 1 An 1nnovnion Ia underwfly ~n green sky and the blue grates and
neps with a letter an hca· hand our Nau•eth Coller<' llbruy. vm th~ trees swaying in t he wind­Ilut.
today ha.d b~en difTt:tl!nl . To· the oqtanb.ation o! • "1)8n\phlet One or them just. Wililked to the
day the letter waen't wl'lt.lcn in f\14!." This f\fe will contrtin st,>vera1 bu• atop The p 1•0 r. kcep11 follow·
Stc.we·.-. handwriting: no. iL "'"" Lhou~nnd rwmphlet~.offl••·inJ:: inval- in~: my glance out the window. 1
lyped- it " '811r•'t tht' on~ l'lhl' had uoble curnmt nlntt-r'lftl na • MUpple ..
1
read the dire summons in his eyes.
e::q Jected. hud woit.ed toa·. No, thiA mont. to exJK!IUtive t'(•fe•·cnce books. Ah Spring' Ah Poctr·y• "Ah
one wn~ chanJlin~r her whole life An c ncytlopedla, for instnnce. nuts !" (end or quot(!). h'i!h juet
j u3t u littl~ l)iecc uf su•pcr nttd it. JH'iC'<'d Ill nbout S2h0, nnd 1''-!ViKed otrcwed me some ra t ion points. 1
"'as ehnnging he1· whole life. onl)• in per•iofl• of ten, fi fteen . 01· told her t his is fl'e<'. HnYe you
Suddenly Cnthy stOJJPl'<L She even twcnty·fivc )'N&I"f, hr ttoon out. henl'd o! the hetmeless Moran who
looked up and round hel'll.elr in dnt(ld. 'r hutt, thft •·emcd)• for the went to the OPA for a eciling?­b
ont o( t he gr(!nt old ehUI'Ch. She t~ituntioll ~un•t•nt IIUpplcmentRt'y 4 r·clat ive of mine.
s;ood still n minute nud t hen IJII Illllhlet.a! Ou1· Jll\mphlet$ cover 1 hope J haven'L bored you ,
quick!)· turned and run Ul) th~ over lAO gener~tl·inlel'tl'IL topics. Kan~as dear. but with t he Spring
:steP'-'· Sb~ drew t.he hen\')' door A few of the •ubjeet heading' weather alld all, I'm A bit (!)
b~ck nnd walked in. She ~enofle<-t.· 11re: addrcfol&~$. lcetunt. amuse. slap-happy. So is Irish--more lit·
ed and made the ertcn of thtJ CI-ON ml'nl .. , Art, lthletfer~:, RVInlion, erally ~!peaking, !10 l gue83 I'd bet·
a\&tomat.teally, and lhen shC' wa11 book ll•tA. bu•ines-. co"'munism, ter c ut it short for now.
hurryin(t up thf e~nter n~le to the trlfH. ddtnllt, difen!le, edutation. Next time you,re up night fty.
al tar. food, ht .. tory, andu•try, intt-r- inJr, pidc a lt:w o( those moon4
She knell beneath t.ht lad1· 1n Am~m:an atraira. international re-o beams we ~td to talk about. will
blue •net looked up into her Caet. lauon"', httrature. pos:te111, re- )'Ou'! I'll be waiting !or them in
S"he prayed ~lowly at 6t1l bot toon ltgton, IIC'Itnet trade, war. and your n~n lt!tter. 'Bye no•.
'<\'as talking (asttr and !a$ttr youth Lo,·e.
"Dear Lady." she n1d, "Pie&H t'or the purpo-e of harboring
find Steve·~ ship: Pleas\" find I tht:M llamphleu, a new fil4." oC fo\lr PoiJyanna
Steve •• The letter had uid, "We draw-en h.u been purthased, to be .---------------.
regTet to inform you that Ste\'f' added 10 our previouJ eight. Sim·
Kelly t- missing in aehon." ltl!.... rlar add1lion" will bt made, u fu­iog-
1ost-he "'o'asn't dead-no. ture nHd• require. The pamphlet
onl)' mwintl. ••J>t.ar l_...d)', )'OU ftl~ will he l'f'~tdy for Ufle In the­lost
your Son and tori'O\\'td: )OU ' count' o! • month or JiX wtekt
found )'OUr Son and l't-joiced. l'vt Thty will be houted in a he di"p1ay
lost m)• ~te,·e. and I am .on·ow .. room whrch, by September. will
inJt: please find rny Steve, that I ha\'t' bet:'l tundormtd into a · ·nf'w
may rejoite.'' rtftr('n<"(" •·oorn " Equ1pmtnt for
FAVORS - TROPHIES
CLUB JEWELRY
SCHOOL and COUEGE
RINGS
The Metal Arts Co.
Inc.
::-:.::·~~-.-;u·;;z-;o"..t. "..:. " :'o"-'..; .' ~":'; '~. .· ;;-:o;:"': lhc: 1''00rn h• •h·ead.>· on ordel'.
Thtt coll(•Jl<" libn.r)' ha" alt'o ttc· Roc h ester, N. Y.
742 Portland Ave.
}ems Nailed to the Cross qult·o•l • new tc•••t-<il"''lo-motor- "Our Representative
"lobe whi<h I• Rtll'a<ting well·d•- Will Gladly Call ''
l1a•·y atood ond watc•h<!tl: and
eould not "ec-
Yet felt the winds of time w('rt
blowing ne~u·
A man ~~~· bt>cl .. . t h~ ni«ht ...
tho·e hu~)I)Y )'Nu-,. •••
And l hcn. t he h'-'ord t h('nl n11ll
•N vtd altt.•nuon. Oisumcf', ttme of ~----------­llik"
ht, and t'OUtt.' nrc etudly n1ttr•
lAinnbtc b)" the great ~o:iu~Jr which 1:------------­••
nwrkt•d tm· • uch llH.'II8\II cment-11.
Ail· l1'11VCI lllPke!ll 1nudy nucl usc of
thil glolw imUOI'Itm1 nnd n("ct"·
~UI')',
lf It's
BORDEN'S
She ~i:inli~~;n Then: flhe J(U\\' Lhe NOTP.: Th;-·(;i';;;;;;;-extcrull'
a,g:ony rint.·e•·e lhnnk~ tt> thOii<" ~opho- It's Got To Be Good
And bletl whh f-lim: All(l l'lh~d n MOI'tfll whtl compo"f'd tht• JlOena
lon<ly tear I h118e<l on th• VSt•Atloyn• of the ('ro •
When 1 aised. •he JZazed at. All She
held most. dear
And in be!' hn11. ahe kn•w thnt
t.his n1u.st bt'
Redecmm~ human life by Godly ! Funeral H o m e
death
To God'$ AlmiRhty will GttMem­anized.
604 Maple Street
•
BORDEN
ICE CREAM
285 Ormond St.
1:.1.- willed Lhi~ Calvary to Hua Saz.
areth .. ·~· --- .- -- ----... . ..... ---------··-~-~-- ............... -------------·········
Lovrn~t still. Cod ,..a" rrueirled
Blessed t:e the God Who let' me
ibare -rain
Th~ c:hahc~d prrifk~ of love and
Cl"' or '46
A Salut ~ to Nazareth College
bad ano,.·or•d olf-hand<dly, "That'• ,.--- ----- ----------- --------,
SttYe Ktlly. ju~t moved into town
a month ago: 1enlor too. worka at
old mant• Wcelda· CI'Of'('l·y.'· ~he
had v.-atched hirn atand by the
Juke box and look at the dancing
gl1'1!!.. Sh4;0 h11d \\'tll<'hed him cut in
and whirl t..inda, the bell~ of the
t~thool. atrQ~,. t he ftoor. Hut hr
hadn't gone back to hea·, nor to
any of the othcl'l •lthou"h he
d11nced with muny. And then h
w11s her tu•·n und "he held he •·
breath u,s he mndc hi11 wn)• tow1wd
btl'. He triJ>J>ed Utull on tht:l shoul·
dcr And smiled down Into Cnthy'"
r~tct, hl11 ~YC:"' l11uu-hlna AA t hfl)'
t lway8 dicl " I'm Steve, whftl'a
Greetings
PERRY'S FLORIST
you•· name?'' h~ ";ald. llt t• brellth 1-------------- - ---- -----.....J
A T oast to the Natiou's
Good Heal/It for De/e11se
BARTHOLOMAY MILK
555 St. Paul Street, Roch ester, N. Y. Main 6520
· · ·· ~ ·· · ····· · · · ··· · ··········~··~~~-~ ~ ·~~~ · ··· -·················~·········- ·

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Transcript

VOL. XIX NAZARETH COLLEGE, ROCHESTER, N.Y., MARCH 30, 1944 No. 5
May Day Plans Electronics Promise ISRO SCHEDULED FORMA Y 5th AND 6th
Get Under Way Post-War Advantage JEAN SCHANTZ, JOAN DUGAN DIRECTING
Nu•nreth College'• 1944 May
Ouy is seheduled for the 8th day
or May. Plan~ are under wa~· to
mnke t hig the b(!st May Doy in
history. The honora r)' ehairman i&
~lliss Ruth Lorenz., Miss Jean
Foley, general chairman. The Spir­iLual
Chairman, Miss M1u·y J ane
Sehwarh, promises that His Ex·
cellency, Bishop Kearney, will be
11re&ent to begin the Day with the
Holy Sacrifice o{ the.. Mass. A !ter
b•· .. kfast, the Student Body will
mnreh in procession to the \'Drious
shrines of the four classes. Bene·
diction will follow the visitations
and wHI close the morning'~ activ.
ities.
The n rternoon'& progt•am in·
e1udes t he presentation o! Shakes·
peare's As You Like It, the crown­ing
of the May Queen, and the
serving of re!reshmenis. 1"hcre
will be many celeb•·itie..s ttttending
the ceremonies.
The committees working on the
phtnl! for the day include:
Pageant-Cinlre Yarte1·, e hair·
man; Claire Ellen Mogenhan, 0o1'•
is Dierdorf, RltJJ Bettner, Mat•y
Knapp, MaJ•ie Mut·phy, Beverly
Jones. Marina LaNasa, Ro~emary
Connol', Dorothy ·wegmnn.
Reception - Agnes Murtha,
thnirmn.n; Betty Dooley, Virgin in
Gould, Jane K .. eekel, Rosemary
Welch, Jean Scha ntz., Rosemary
Dooley, Kathryn Cutler, Bctly
Keegan, liildred Okolowicz, Nancy
Herron, Alice Foley.
Refreshments-Catherine Foley,
ebah·man; Maureen Henry, J enn
Kreber. Mary E. Lee, MtH'Y E.
Danehy, Helen Mary Bauman,
Helen Rauber, Kntherinc Rogan.
Publicity-Louise Bcnhon,
chairman; Madeline Nuccitell i,
Al)•ce Madden, Marthhell.
All we need to really put the Day
over is 100% cooperation on the
p.ut of the student body! Let's
evel'ybody get in and help. Watch
The. Gleaner lor further announce­ments!
1'his is the second in n series of
l'eports on post~war opportunities
to .. college won1en made by om·
pJaeement. d irector, Mi.151> Eva
Sch reine•··
Probably there is no field o{
scientific •·esearch where mo1o.e
progress has been made during the
wm· period than "electronics,"
especially radio and its; related
fleld. television. With the inc•·ea.s­ing
importance or aviation in both
offensive &nd defensive modern
wa.rfllre, industrial enginee1.·s have
made amazing strides in develop·
ing entirely new features in 1·adio
trnnsmission and conb·ols, which
tn-e necessary in the precision op­erations
of military aviation.
In the. po$t.war period theM t·e·
markablc improvements and ttd·
vane:es will be divert-ed to civiHan
J)ut·poses in the amusement, edu·
eationnl nnd scientific fie lds. Tele·
vision, likew"ise, which was just
being int1·oduced commercially
when the wnt• broke out. has been
perfected because of the neccssi·
ties of war, and bent o.gain the
civilian populaiion will t"enp the
benefits in the JU)t5t.wa•· period.
With the scientific developments
and imsn·o"eme.nts in civilhm radio
and television equipment., modern
advertis ing will develop incl'eased
uses, nnd with inct·eased consum­er
demand ther,c m·e likely to be
new and intet•esting developments
in pl'Ogl'am planning.
Apart from the opporlunities
fo1· woman scientist..:; in the field
o! l'adio manuracturing and tech·
nical '"o•·k in radio stations, which
has been opened to them during
the Wit1· period, the program field
!iihould off'e1· widely inereas.ed op­portunities
tor college women.
The National Broadcasting Com.
puny has recently circulated un nr·
ticle prepared for Broa.dca•ting
Magadne by Clfll'l!nce L. Menser.
Vice-President in Charge of Pro·
grams, •·elative to college radio
cour!;e);J the gist of which is that
Lhese courses should contain more
background work and less techni­cal
training. He docs not say that
Jesus Condemned
To Death
The etowd is suddenly and dc...'ldly
still.
A nightmaJ•ish, oppressive. hostile
lull-
The water trickling over hands
sounds dull
And Pilate's !earful heart t urns
cold with chill . .•
The Jew~; have fl'ightened him with
"Crucify!"
And yet he knows this man is inno­cent,
Jesus1 who stands holy, f:p·eat nnd
..spent,
Jn s ilent. height - he condemns
Hirn to die-
Oh, Jesu~. J esus. you have still to
1(0
A long, hard way until the end
will come-
Only condemned you are ; and
death is slow-
Your burning heart with agony is
nunJb-
But shadows, gloomier than the
g~·ave,
Rise: all the souls ol men you
came to save.
M. Bed '46
the eo11eges have not made a
worthwhile contribl.Jtion, but !eels
that college CO\ l i'SCS genc1-alty arc
doing things they shouldn't at-­tcm)>
t·, while neglecting some o(
the obviou$\ things the)• a•·e quali·
tied to do. Comparing radio to
rnedicine, he mak es the J)oint that
every •·eput.able colle..ge which
wnnts to mnke n cont1·ibution to
the field of medicine, otTe•·s pre~
medical courses, t hese courses
being built on the theory t hat
every good doctor should have a
bltckg .. ound of genenll in formation
about the human body, about
chcmistl'y nnd a lot of othet· thinJ,.'S
(Continued on Page 4)
SCOOP!
FLASH!
The rctUJ·ns on the voting fot•
May Queen attendants have just
come to the GleanCl·. \Ve can bet'e
make known the two e.hosen from
each oC the fout· elnMc-s, but the
name of the May Queen must be
withheld until May 8.
Re1·e they al'e: Fresbmen, Nancy
Ret·1·on and Aliee Foley i SOJ>ho·
mores, Helen Mary Bauman nnd
Mmy Cathct•ine Fisher; juniots,
Jane Lally and Martha Sheedy;
seniors, Bett>• Doole.)• and Virginia
Sullivan.
Nazareth Red Cross Ut~it
Will Donate Blood
Once ngiiin, the blood bank has
issued •·equest3 Cor blood donors
.f1·om Na~nreth College. Rernero·
bering how well the Naznrencs
turned out last ye.;:u·, the Red Cro$&
is eonfident that the Mme. !;pirit
will be shown again.
Arrangements are being nHtde
for the day~students to go to the
Red Cross center in gl'oups of ten.
The resident student& will go to
the center on some Satut"day in
the ncar future.
Alumnae Receives
. Maryknoll Habit
On March 7, the r.,.st of St.
Thomas Aquin as, Edith Wilson of
the class of '43 received the habit
of the Maryknoll Siatet-s, or mol'c
specifically, of the Foreign Mi~­s
ion Si$ters of St. Dominic. Her
name in •·cligion is now Sister
Mary Edward Mn1·mion.
The cc. .. emony took place Rt 3:30
P. M. in the chapel of the Mother·
hou:;e of the :\taryk noll Sisters at
Ossining·On·the·Budson. The Mo:st
Reverend William F. O'Shea of
Ma1·yknoll officiated . .BishOJ) O'­Shea
is one of twelve missionary
bishops consecrated b)t Pope Piu.s:
Uehearsnl~third annual
SRO musical show are now under
way. The play wa.s written and h~
being dit·ceted by J can Schantz.
The daneo routines a t·e under the
dil·ection of Joan Duga n. Doris
Oierdorf has c haa·ge of the music.
Rita Bettnet· has assumed l'CSpons­ibility
ot stnge manuger, nnd AJice
VtmdeVoorde is business manager.
The c~st includes Betty Keegan
as Kristina, Kay Tcmmerman R$
Ony. .Marilyn Moore ns M iu C.
O'Toole, Jane Thurston as Daphne
Prentiss, Nancy Brown a::~ Aggie,
and Jean WhltJe)' a~ Put. Ed and
1"om Keenan, W(lll known to Roch·
ester theatt· e-goer~ . play the roles
of Kevin ttnd the biology J)rofessor,
a·especUvely.
XII in L939, and is reeently r e­turned
i1·om his pasto~·nl duties in
China.
Also in the cast m·e Marion
l1aul, Marja Berle, )Jar)' Esther
Dnnehy, Kuy Foley, Doric Anne
Reverend E. J. Lintz of our Flnherty, Joan Dugan, Doris Dicr·
faculty was prese-nt for the cet•e .. dod, Jnne Lally, Dorothy Argen·
mony.
Edith was Viee-Pl'efeet of the
Sodality nt Na~nreth College last
year, and during her four.year
s tay here. she was adept at ba!i­ketbnll
, displaying at once an en·
thusiasm for the game and true
sportsmanship. Sister Mary Ed·
ward Mal'mion reeeived a Bachelor
of Science degtee here with a ma·
jor in Chemistt·)•.
tieri, Rosemar), Bell, Nancy Her­a
·on, Alyce Madden, and other$.
Several song8 have been writ­ten,
including "Memory o( You"
by Rita 8ettner; " J'm \Vttlking on
Air., b)1 :Fran Guli; "This Is the
Night for Day Dreaming" by Doris
Oicl'dori nnd J ean Schantz ..
Joan Dugan and Claire Yarter
will do a specl a.cular dance routine
to "Lullaby "' the St.a•"'" by Oo,.is
Dic•·dorf. Joan has also arranged
They lttughcd when 1 st..a1·ted to several dance t•outines for the
make a new kind of dynamite, but chorus which includes 1·epresenta·
when l dropped it, they exploded. tives {rom e~c h class.
r-:.t ~[~~.n~~m~~gi~io:~~;n-e-xt-ye-.-.--.-+
Ft·eshman Class?
Have you invited you1· (riends in yout O\vn parish and in the
Senior Class of your High School Alma Mater to come to Naz- f
areth next year? t
Have you told them all that Na1.areth College has to olfer? t
I Do they knew.• t.he co-urses that are JSCheduled?
I If you can't nnswe1· uYES" to all t hese q uestions, may we I suggest that you begin now to interest you1· fr iends in coming to I Na:ear eth. If each student would contact at least one high school
ff senior, the type of girl who wouJd become an ideal Naztn·cth Col· I
lege girl, you would all be pl'oud or the Class o! 1948.
+-----------~-----~------
2
THE G LEANER
NAZARETH COLLEGE
PubliC"allon Oftieo: Ceorg\'1 1\ Burn'~ P 1'e1'!1t, Inc .. 40-r.l Nol'th Wulcr St.
~====~ ·..e.
VOL.. XIX THURSI)AY MARCR SO, 1941 No.5
=========== ~======
Publi•hod )lonthl>•
Tbe Student-s of Na::areth Col1ege. Roehe.ter. ~- Y.
hDITOJt.JN.CHUW HUiiiNt:l'lK MASAC:t:R
J .. ., ... Chlav.roll Mt~rw•rh e 1\rau•e
oori. Di~rdort
NV.ws ,.;onoR
Narr lblt~eouhl
Pt!ATliiU. JmrTOR
X..f'Mai'J' Wdds
~()('lt:r\' EDITOR
C'-1«' \'ut..-
SPORT'S J;OITOK
llorothy Wettman
111-.:AO ,.Vl'IST
Ma.ry Ltoone
51'01t"rS
l,uC'IIte tlbdhhon
JNn lAnnon
JOin o~un
Mar,. J,..••• Meter
Ph,IUa P .. :u
,w.,)' Kt"lh'
A!4SOCIA 'rl~ Y.I)ITORS
ltUMOR lr.DITOH
lot.rlly!l MOO""
AJ.t1M'SA:·~ F.DITOU
Ma• -, K. Ufll.ly
"~'ltl Jlttley
\IUSIC lo~OJTOK
UtoU)' K~ar~
l'Ihnltrl
fitl{'lt;•r y !)TAPf
t:Jalra t:ll.-n MoJC~nhan &ohrtha GaUac hcor
1943
NV!otiC: ~TAf'"l''
Hto••..,•f1' Scllttloft
=====~~so;,;;c;..::io!C'rl CollPe.iale Press
We Really Need It
1944
Recently we have had hurled at UR the word s pirit !
Spit·il! SPIRIT !-And why?-because we just haven't any
spirit, and we need it! !
We. the edito1'S of this paper, have never attended any
othet• college, so we arc not claiming to speak from ex­perience.
llowever, it doesn't seem to us thnl other college
girls hnve to have "whe•·e is your spirit '/" th•·own at them
a ll the tim e. Spirit is something thnl should be in us. We
should not have to have it talked into us.
We should be behind our school, pushing it for wa•·d,
making it a bigger and better school! Then someday. we
could look back and exclaim. "Nazareth College! Why,
that's my school! That's my old Alma ) later!"-And then
we would send om· dnughte•·s back to Nazareth-because
it is our school and we love it!
Maybe we are speaking of a quite distant futu re, but
Jo,·ing Nazareth goes fo1· the present. too. Sure! We're a ll
young 11nd happy and full of fun. and that'~ just the way
:-:'11zareth wants us to be. She doesn't want us to be dead­heads
by any means. but she doesn't want us to be fool­ha•
·dy either. She has always been behind us in all our so­cial
alfn i•·s, and she alwnys will be if we back her up in
the things she wants- the things s he's asking us aren't i)ig
sacrifices. the;v' •·e just lillie t hings (and all {or ou•· own
good. too!)-
Think for example. about cutting a ci&S3 and jabber­ing
in the Social Room !-Taken indh•idually, it's no one's
los" but our own. but. take 250 cut classes se,•e•·al time~ a
week. nnd why! it's enough to knock a ~chool •·ight off its
foundntio n. After all. we gel as much out of school as we
put into il. and we should make it om· business to gel as
much out of it as we can.
Life is what we make it, kids-and that goes for col­lege.
too!
Lent For The Duration?
Ye:. the season of Lent is a lm o~l ovc1· for the yea •· of
1944. Has it been a well spent six weeks? Every year we
say that we'll sacrifice more and deny ourselves more next
year. Ha\'C we kept our promise to ourseh·es? Was this
~·ear better than last? We ha,•e one week to prO\'e the
answet".
Lent, after all, is the one lime d ur ing the year when
Cnlholics give m~re thAn the usu11l amount of thought to
the spil"itunl side of thing~. This period reminds us that we
must work for the spiritual rather than the material. It
ghows the need of uniting ourselves in the spirit of pen­ance
with the redeeming work of Christ. Through fasting,
mo•·tificalion. acts of charity, and spiritual exercises, we
aESociate ourselves mot·e closely with that wot·k of Christ.
Ou•· souls so easily lJccome sla ves to the wol'ld with its
Til£ GLEANER
AMERICAN
ANTHEM
By DOLORES BENNETT '47
I don't w~tve fiaJ(1J
.\nd make pretty ~~f'C'htfl.
But I'm thinking o( the boy$
On the South Pacific booch.,.,
\Vhot America •·eally iA
We have neve•· known­'
l'nklnK things Co1· fei'Mlted,
L.. i k(' childl'en ovenc,·own.
If I ,.. • ..., .. ked
I would probably •ay • •
Amerit:a is freedom,
Our Cree right·Of·\lia)~
Sto1·cs on the tOl'Oet•,
C'oplJ on t he beat,
l)QiiveJ')' t1·ucks.
Ancl children in the fltre('t,
Striving as alway~o
To get uuru~l,·es ahead.
Fu~e education.
.'\ place to lny our hend.
A deruoc1·atic lcAde:•·
To 11et. u.s a•·ight,
A Hg:ht to turn on
In the blatkness or nifl'ht.
h'a the right to learn,
And uy what we Hkt.
It'• t.he pleasun of a bo)·
(ionlK otT on n hike,
A t.uin passinJt by
Throu,~th eity and t.tation.
The ri(lht to help
In the progreu o( t.ht nation.
Hotdogs and homburlt"'.
The cin;u!\ in town:
The jo)t we f\nrl
lu watching 11 down.
ll'11 Jim and Joan
To be married in the iprin~r,
h '• likin« or dit-likintr
Sinatra or Bing,
To lake aS- we ple,.~t·
Fl'ee ru nning water,
The right or • fnthCI'
To rhca·ish his dt\ughte•··
A dear lillie ar,
C'hHdren on the LTo11e)'
l·'or only hal£ ral·e.
h 'r- tnHslf: on a lot,
.\ hou~e 15UlndinK then.•:
A aimJJie porch
\\'ath .w lounging- ~hair.
Atnerie:a is a JOigh
On ~vtryone's liJ~­It'M
u n.'!f1·c.shing drink
1'hot n newtomc•· sipM
I'll bet Lhe boys
On thf' South Pacific hto•cht!t
Would like to and could
.\tak(' Car better s~eehd P•·o·
testant churches of his d!lf· The conflicting mun-made doc. I
trines of these vnl'io4s ppnominations d•·ovc him more and
more to •·ely on his own interp retation of the Bible, and. of I
the preachments of Cllriat. That he derived a true meaning
from the words of Goq, Is shown in his strict adhet·ence to
the golden rule. Thu~ )liB faith in God ga\'e him the cour­S'Ie
and willingness tp eerve mankind with a serenitY of
''ision that was to dispel Jhe clouds of wa1·, hate and in­tolcmnce,
and sec the lll'ighl horizon of pence, freedom
a nd justice to all men.
Lincoln's biographers, interested only in his political
career. have failed t~ elaborate on the true source and
foundation of Lincoln's philosophy. the Holy Bible. It would
be inte1·esting to learn what Lincoln thought of Catholicism
or if he eve•· tried to embmce the faith, but this thought
must go ununswered for no autho•· gives any light on thi~
~WHL I Lincoln's mild D11\!ll1Ct' and unr uffled composu•·e be-lied
the power and detQrminalion he possegsed which was
to ~a,•e the Cnion. Surrounded by insidious and petty asso­ciales
who tried to belittle him at every turn. he tactfully
and with unerring judflment rallied his erstwhile ct·itics to
his Kide to help him wjlre the ,\·ar against the forces that
tried lo destroy ou1· American her itage, Ft·eedom. May his
Sla ttn·e grow forever.
CHESTER J. CHI AVA ROLI
Dear Students.
The No\'ena of Gr11ce has come to a successful con·
elusion. And, probably unknown to us. some unbelievers
1
may ha\'e received the p1·ccious gift of Faith through our
intet·cession.
This yeur's Novel)!\ wus one of the most devo ut and
well tlltcnded in the ~ifltory of the Fr emin l\1 ission Unit.
The nine days of praypr we•·c opened by out· Bishop with
a sermon on the life of Saint Francis Xa\'ier; nnd through·
out the No,•cna, :'\azarenes were very zealous about pa•
ticipating. The spiritu,j exercises were concluded very fit.
tingly wilh Benedictio11 or the Blessed Sacrament given by
Fa ther l.intz.
We thank you Cor you•· generous coopct'll lion in mak·
ing the Novena of Grace and in celebrating Sl. Patrick'$
Day by attending the ttl~; and we ask you to •·em ember our
Field Day which will be coming soon-to pray for its sue·
cess and to do all you can to make it a worthy mission
effort.
THE GLEANER
Spanish Studes Hear
Brazilian Senhora
3
! ems Bears His Cross
Re takes a ct'os."' to beat· to Calvary
''Like a page out of Vogue." His back is bent benenth the
That's what the girls said after mighty load
they heard the intel"C$ting talk Hi& foot-steps plod along, Elis cap..
given by Mrs. Balzer at a recent tOl'S goad
meeting of the Spanish Classes. Rim to a fastel' pace to pa)• the
Having 1·eside.d in Sao Paolo, fee
Bt·azil, {or over eighteen years, Set fo)' salvation from our ways
~h·s. Balzer spoke like a true
"Brazilian," emphasizing the gr(!at
beauty~ the brilliant color both in
nuture and in the JX!Op1e, and their
deep love for this gl'eat South
American republic. ''One does not
simply say Brazil/' she said, be t·
blue eyes twink1ing, udown there,
on earth,
While Jew1; on every side mock
Him nnd jeer
Not wanting to understand His
mission here
And making up this eros.~ for Him
since birth.
everyone says in a low, a lmost So when we think of Ri_s gnat
reverent tone, Bna-zil !'' sacrifice
Although iMn;. Balze1· speaks We must reco.JJ He bore the eros~
t>ottugue-tSe fluently, she and her fot· us
son Michae lJ eldest. of her fout· Out sins the heavier !or 1111 the
Brazilian-boJ·n children, attend
Mec hanics Institute where the)'
•re studying the g .. arnmatical
structure of the language. ••They
arc my star pupiJs/' pt•oudly smiles
Pro(esso•· Angeline Guzzetta.
Mrs. Balzer said that the people
of Sout-h ArrH!t·ic.a are very kind and
''ice
Now spreading in this modern
wo1'1d of lu15t,
Anger, gluttony, and greed, a
world gone mad
But saved by one Man Whom we
made so sad.
Cl ... o£ '46
hHiustrious. She toJd an amusing ;r,tr,;Y.!t~?~t':?;\;Y.:'W'~i;.;'~(t;-t.;.,.~~~.;,~;~~!:.;.{;fl
little anecdote about a Brazilian
Hele n Macchit~, Ruth Lorenz, and Jean Se-hants. Co Travelinr maid whose "only ambition was
to become n housekeeper." The
Back n(tcr nn evenLJul and exciting t-rip to New Yo1·k al'e Ruth lowe,. middle class desire nothing
Lorenz, Belen Macchia, seniors; and Jean Schantz. junior. This tt;o, Sodality Stre·et more, and fervently aspire to ful-members
of the Forensic Soeiet)• of Nazareth College, took p~ll't in n Mass, Holy ~u-nion, Mental fill their ambitions a$ competent
debate ftt Good Counsel College. Prayct·, wet·e stressed by sodality servants.
The senior Nazat•enes took the The Btazilian~ insist upoo being
n.g.· ,·ve ,·n t•e debate: leaders in observance of Vocation called The United States of Braz. . " Concert Features Week In Student Hour on March b . h
Re~;olved: Thnt the United Sta.tes h J 6 " skit was pJ•esented 5hOwing il, and claim we over ear our t'·lgl t Sbcm1d Participate in an lnterna· T C h a ikO WSk y's 4t the importnnce of deciding upon iUnn ittehdi nSktiantge s.o u81r'sae~livl'ess larlghec. coitn.i eys
~~n~t.p~!~·n~or~~i:!::~t;~• ~::.~ On Thursday evening, llarch 9. ~~: a~~:~~~~n!n:ap•~::i~l ,.::;~i~; are much like ours, and the land
)lacchia and Jean Schnntz took the Rochester Philharmor)iC wa.s is sp·rinkled with many pictuJ.·e.lilace." There "'"' wild animals,
The debattH"S le!t Io•· the tour with Bach'~ Chol'ale P1·elude, "Wir To Choose a Successful Career" of coutse. but they nre whe
1
·e they
on Wednesduy nft.e•·noon, ~itu"Ch glauben all' em e inen Gott!' AJ. wa~ reviowt!-d by th(l: Sochalit.y JU'(\ would naturally be, in the innu
22. While in New Yo1·k, they though this work was originally feet. Mary Jane Schwartz, jungl~ tel·ritory. •'The greatest.
atnyed at the Barbi~on Plnza and written for the organ, the orches.-- Western N. Y. Sodnlity Conven. di!iturben;:," she said, uare t..hc in­telUI'ned
late Sunday ni{rht, Ma-rch tral transcl"iption. by Ph 1 1 i 11 tion was held in Buffalo on March sects. 1 think Brazil must have t.he
26. In the intel'im, while they were James, was unusuaUy effective. 19 at the KleinhAns Musie Hall. greAtest number of insects in the
not debating or d~scussing, the The highlight of the evening A delegation of Sodnhst.s from world."
girls attended. \'arJous theatre~ wa$ the presentAtion oC Tchaikow. the College attended. The. subject I However, the people ttt•e ehect··
(one play whiCh they saw W&$ sky's f'Otllth Symphony in F. Min- ~ under discussion was lnteracial ful and happ)' They love thetr
Othello), movies (one of these 01·. Th1s symphony, which was com- JuEJtice, wh1C:h is very timely since land deal'ly, and r·-esent any dem­was
the s,ong of Be•·nadettc). and pleted in 1878, was dedtcated to it is recognized that ucial and na. onstratlon of fol'eign super~onty.
many l'adlo b•·o:tdcasts. Mme. Nadcja von Mech, one of L1onnl ptcjudices must. be .aban-' They have a great sense of hum-
The girls bad an excellent time Tchaikowsky's close friends. doned in 01-der to have men hve or, and delight in making the
while away and ha\'e. e xpJ•essed Of the fo\Jr movements, the in common bl'otherhood. Por·tuguelie the b1·unt of all theil'
their t!nthu.si~sm foJ• having ~ad 1 third and £oul'th were particularly On Tuesday MaJ'Ch 14th the jokes. Mrs. Balzer gave an am us ..
the oppol·tumty of rcpresentmg outstanding. The third movement, Lit.el'atut•e Committee or the So· ing illustration of this by telling
Nazareth on t.he tour. I the pi~~icato ostinato, was dis- dalit.y had an interesting and in· nbout a Portuguese who on a very
,...,. ., • •, . •, . . ,.%~~~=:-z~~~.f~·:~!·•=-•=Y.=•·:··=••,!••·····~.. ~ played to its best advant.age by formative maeting while. TC\•iewing •·niny day was tr-avelling in an
=.;v;.agnns of­fering
sacrifice to a heathen god.
they bu1·n incense nnd sitenlly
leave.
The next day the sound of voices
mingles with the odors. ln fact,
,the voices &1'•rfes from " Die Wal·
Continuing this analogy, he kuere'' proved favorable to its lis-­recommenda
that colletces should tenen and compJettd the program
not t~arh 1,rofwional technique5 '?"~";!~~"""'i!.":""t':'~. .i .. i""~"'-;··."';"'';'";"-"':'".;"':.; .t --:
but thould sl)f'nd the time on
coune• they are prtpared to teach.
For examJ)le, for potential ~Tit..
era in radio, college course!> can
do a tremendou• 1e1·vice b)' teach­Simo11
H elps Jesus
Bear His Cross
ing things which tan be lAughl It was not out. of kindntM that
about the bu:~ineu of wrh.int and the.)' A:ald.
which give n bar.kgtound !o1· •'lf~lp Lhoo this man le!!t he 11hoold
scl'ipt-writ..in~t. fi e comments on Cnll nnd di~"
the Iacl thnt. the JW('J·ngc writer No pity movtd them. or sound of
who Rl>pllct' tol' n job in script-- weal'y tigh.
writing hns ftJli>Brtontly neve.r The)' c:al'ed not t.hat ltit holy
Jt:arned very n1 uth ttbout the ex:· hruhPt' H Plllil
pert use o! word.s in picture!Sque Ac.hed from the crown of thorns
speech: that ht doreting the
employer to the emplo)·ce: and the
advont.age.c; and diudvantagea of
labor union,..
Ruth Lorenz Wl\111 chnh·mnn of
the discussion in which tho follow·
ing gil'ls from tt HochcstN· lndufl­trial
plant took part: Louise Mnc­B,.
idc, Ann McCollough. K a y
Slot·n. Olive Coldgrovo, €•th"r
Hi~k~y and Marion futnl.
Th""e taking part from the Col·
!ege were Helen Macchia, Jane
Kreekel, Jean Folt')", Ann Bogan,
Jean C•ppellino and Margaret Me·
Dermott.
Under the au_spices of the See·
retariaJ Clubt tbe students had an
opportunil)' to see Miu )Ja rgan~t
Hamma, the. world'& ~hampion l)'ll*
ist, hto1·e at Nazareth on fo"cb. 28.
M i!s Hamma dcmonRlrated her
typing technique in t.hc nudito•··
ium on an e leet•·omntlc L}'JlcwriL·
cr. She ah;o g-nve heiJ>(ul Muggrs·
tions th~t wj)J aid the IJX1Cd nnd
~ee u racy of the secl'etarial 8dence
major1-.
The senior 1ecretaria.l atudenll
offered their &el'vicu lo any girl
having diflieulti~ in mak1n1t out
her incom~ tax. after Studenttl'
Hour on March 8.
THE G LEANER 5
PRAYERFUL MEMORIES ~::t!!!::~~··i.!!~·~~~·~·"i~Ut~tr~fr.1r:1t~tfJt:..it...~.:.: Wrong Date
A Short Story
~bt atood a moment. thought·
tully. on &he tOI) •t~p •• the door
..... f the Po~t Offitf ttqueaked t~hut
I hind h~er. In her hand aht
utcbtd tightly a tom envelo~
addrtaM'd to "M~ Cathtnno- Dar.
1 Wla., T1ppmJ Town, :-\ J " and a
ttfl• •he-et of paper with tht
u ur4f. ''\\ • ~Jt'rN to inform )'OU
cued a little as 11he answf!t·td
··Cathy"
They didn't talk much that night
but they dancfil th~ rest of the
evf'nin« toa-ether, hill ~rs-istence
finally ¥~-inning out: the other fel­lows
•topped euuing They walked
home- tostether after the dance and
th~ night \\'8.1 cool and !r~h and
tht> 11tan: made it brigbL
\",.t in her blue onl)' .chool dan~e held at the
"ll HI h11d dl.&aJJJ)eartd and the lonK aJIIteioul'l Countr)' Club. Cath)' wu
goldtn lat~hes clo"ed hhlf WA)'. A beAutiful in her Jlink net formal ,t Htl~e blue tam perch~d danKN'OUit· with s:otd sequin$ on it.s full skirt
tr on ,.hor t. blond curl11., n navy S lw wot·C' a gold and pink juliet
kut rmd blue Mweater. 11nddh.1 t'HJI on her aoft yellow eurl11. Her
!tl hoe.~ And "h01L blu~ .cotktl mndc eye~ dnnc·cd. her cheeks wea•t-
111 ber look le"' chan he•· eighteen ftu1thec.J. Steve wB!i tnll ttnd ha nd­)'
fiU'I, Hut t.oduy t he ~toft rl'd I'IOtl'\o and u bit Urltomfot·table in hi~
ft .moulh waA 'lobca·, tlltd the whhc· lUX. Together· they made n pretty
neM ot ht.!r' Jtkin mo1·c nHll'kt.~CI . pictu•·e as they whil'led IH'ound the
Reluttnntly l!lhe moved down !he drtnCl' tloo•·, wa lked a lo ng lhe tQt·­bJg
~~tane "'"~P" o ut futo tht a-u-eet t 1'4te 01' Atood utlking gail)• with
: ..\ pa~ing womnn MIOw( sk)' and they
tall bJark-hau~d boy. Tht)' wtre had walked about the town and
•rniling and uJkrnJl, and hia C)'H ••lkt-d long Stlious thougbt5 about
laughed ._. ht H·bed htr about the life and the ~\.ate o( tht" world. It
U in 1-H!ltc>ry. Tht')' BlOJlJK'd at wA!$ !'()1)ttmb~r and only one week
Mnty's Sweet. Shop and we1·t 1oon wu lcfl to spend together.
!.IJipintr coke111 hnd talkinsc AIC fat1t And they we1·e con~tant.ly t.o ..
u J>ON~lblt'l ftmldst a fCI'OUp M ~11'1" gerber tho!i~ htNt seven day!'. They
and bo)'ll ta·om -chool Now t he \\ea-e hnpJ))' vi"iting each favorite
Juke hox ~sercccht•d out n Jive num~ nook in t he town for Lhtll .. to Steve, yet ihe ~b tr and then hurried
wtre dancrn• around tht-m A door , away dov.-n the steps and out into
ope~~d and '.~ walk.~d a tall un. thco •treet, the tears rolled tilently
f•m•har boy Brud. •he ••ld aft· down her chHk• She stood and
tr a mo!:'t,nt"• . .:lanee at t~.~. nt•· liAtened until tht footsteps fade'd
tomtr,. .•ho 11' that bo)' • ~ht Into the dark cauit!t night Then
had ••d 1t tareltMb. not tho-.·rn~ he turned and went :n-l>idt.
Mr more than UJ~ual lnttr\""' Brud
Jesus S tripped of D ear Kansas
By ALICE FOLEY '47 His GnrmeiiiS I __ The months had pas~l!d und let.· I am waiting you in A- well,
ten had come. She wu loneeonu~ rold cruelty awathed the hill, in a class. 1 know t hat t.s criminal.
but she \US happy and t:ontented, 'Uined red, but I am ofrerinJZ my ~orutanl ree1-
too She wrote often and Steve "You mu ... t du~ wtth nothing.'' they mg o! painful appre-hension up a.~
answe~d her letters alway,.. He I had Pid. penance . . . 11'15h UJ cen!Oring
had e,·e-n been home one~ for ttn 0 m) Cod- this She's Sitting nut to me (~r
days and they had done tht th•nll' T hey dta«ttfd Your prmenta otf I u.'\ual). Oh, l'0\1 know how it t•
they loved to do once apm - had And Your Jeered :~~lun; •.• so 1 can't say much ••• What
been happy u the)' al"'*>-. u"ed Your woundt rtntwed b)· •in, am 1 talking about! ! :
to be. Your body torn- Rosu are blue.
Catl~)· atiJJ went down to Mar. And th1.1 for me: \'iolets are: red.
ry•s and sat and talked with the May I dlt thUJ;. \\Oat am 1 doing
~rl! and boy.s that -.·e~ ,.-till home Strlp~d of all Out of bed!
She ·went to mo,•1e.s and picnict But Jo,•e for Thee. Wish the Prof. would stop look~
and partiH. hut 111ihto alv.·ay• Jane Tbui"Jton '46 ing chi$ way. ~· ... £,·en I, re~
thouJrhl oC Ste\'t and aiWa)'l' wtnt ~ ~,.,. ~ .. , , , ,. • ~ ~ ~ ~ 7 7 7 ~,. ~-,.~,. ..... tr~intd my free-dom with a l'iJrh."
in .the cro--·d .. They k.n.ew •he ".•• .......... $... ........ ,.. ..... .. .. ;._.,..,.....: .... ..... ...., So "•ng the immortal bard (an old
W81ltng ror him-~···"·~ ror htm Ltbra r y Acqutres ••llmato or mine).
to tome home: again to ,ata)· N F"l Gee, but it is beautiCuJ out o!
She W8!'t a1W8.}'1 happie"t when ew I e doors! ,.. . rom here 1 can l'iec the
~be s.kipJJed down the po!l office 1 An 1nnovnion Ia underwfly ~n green sky and the blue grates and
neps with a letter an hca· hand our Nau•eth Collervera1 bu• atop The p 1•0 r. kcep11 follow·
Stc.we·.-. handwriting: no. iL "'"" Lhou~nnd rwmphlet~.offl••·inJ:: inval- in~: my glance out the window. 1
lyped- it " '811r•'t tht' on~ l'lhl' had uoble curnmt nlntt-r'lftl na • MUpple ..
1
read the dire summons in his eyes.
e::q Jected. hud woit.ed toa·. No, thiA mont. to exJK!IUtive t'(•fe•·cnce books. Ah Spring' Ah Poctr·y• "Ah
one wn~ chanJlin~r her whole life An c ncytlopedla, for instnnce. nuts !" (end or quot(!). h'i!h juet
j u3t u littl~ l)iecc uf su•pcr nttd it. JH'iC't.ar l_...d)', )'OU ftl~ will he l'f'~tdy for Ufle In the­lost
your Son and tori'O\\'td: )OU ' count' o! • month or JiX wtekt
found )'OUr Son and l't-joiced. l'vt Thty will be houted in a he di"p1ay
lost m)• ~te,·e. and I am .on·ow .. room whrch, by September. will
inJt: please find rny Steve, that I ha\'t' bet:'l tundormtd into a · ·nf'w
may rejoite.'' rtftr('n· on ordel'.
Thtt coll(•Jlcl .. . t h~ ni«ht ...
tho·e hu~)I)Y )'Nu-,. •••
And l hcn. t he h'-'ord t h('nl n11ll
•N vtd altt.•nuon. Oisumcf', ttme of ~----------­llik"
ht, and t'OUtt.' nrc etudly n1ttr•
lAinnbtc b)" the great ~o:iu~Jr which 1:------------­••
nwrkt•d tm· • uch llH.'II8\II cment-11.
Ail· l1'11VCI lllPke!ll 1nudy nucl usc of
thil glolw imUOI'Itm1 nnd n("ct"·
~UI')',
lf It's
BORDEN'S
She ~i:inli~~;n Then: flhe J(U\\' Lhe NOTP.: Th;-·(;i';;;;;;;-extcrull'
a,g:ony rint.·e•·e lhnnk~ tt> thOiiJ>ed Utull on tht:l shoul·
dcr And smiled down Into Cnthy'"
r~tct, hl11 ~YC:"' l11uu-hlna AA t hfl)'
t lway8 dicl " I'm Steve, whftl'a
Greetings
PERRY'S FLORIST
you•· name?'' h~ ";ald. llt t• brellth 1-------------- - ---- -----.....J
A T oast to the Natiou's
Good Heal/It for De/e11se
BARTHOLOMAY MILK
555 St. Paul Street, Roch ester, N. Y. Main 6520
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